Pensacola Pass

Location of Pensacola Pass in Florida Panhandle, at the Gulf of Mexico.
Pensacola Pass


Pensacola Pass
Location of Pensacola Pass in Florida Panhandle, at the Gulf of Mexico.
Pensacola Pass is located in Florida
Pensacola Pass
Location of Pensacola Pass in Florida, at the Gulf of Mexico.

Pensacola Pass is an inlet between Santa Rosa Island and Perdido Key at the western end of the Florida Panhandle. It connects the Gulf of Mexico to Pensacola Bay. The mainland around Pensacola Bay is heavily developed, with high-rise condominiums. Santa Rosa Island and the eastern part of Perdido Key adjacent to Pensacola Pass are units of the Gulf Islands National Seashore, and remain largely undeveloped.

Description

Pensacola Pass is an inlet between the barrier islands of Santa Rosa Island and Perdido Key connecting the Gulf to Pensacola Bay. Ships and boats use this passage to travel between the two.

During the daily flood tide, fresh saltwater enters Pensacola Pass from the Gulf of Mexico; waters are pulled out on the ebb tide, flushing the bay. The pass is located in the Floridian counties of Escambia and Santa Rosa. It is protected from devastating ocean waves by the Fairpoint peninsula as well as a barrier island, Santa Rosa, from which the county gets its name. The pass itself is about 21 kilometers long and 4 kilometers wide.

History

There is little evidence of human presence around Pensacola Pass before the arrival of Europeans in the area. A Fort Walton culture archaeological site has been identified on Perdido Key, and other archaeological sites may be present, but hurricanes have greatly disturbed and even destroyed such sites on the barrier islands.[1] The Pensacola area was first explored by Europeans in the 16th century. Diego Miruelo found a bay on the north coast of the Gulf of Mexico in 1516 that some authors think was Pensacola Bay.[2]

The Narváez expedition in 1528 may have encountered the Pensacola people in the vicinity of Pensacola Bay. Cabeza de Vaca reported that the Indians they encountered in the vicinity of what is now Pensacola Bay were of "large stature and well formed," and lived in permanent houses. The cacique wore a robe of what de Vaca called "civet-marten", "the best [skins], I think, that can be found." After initially appearing to be friendly, the Indians attacked the Spaniards without warning during the night.[3][4]

Hernando de Soto sent one of his captains, Francisco Maldonando, to find a harbor on the coast west of Apalachee Province that could be used to resupply his expedition. Maldonado selected Pensacola Bay, which he called "Ochuse" after the native name for the land there.[5]

The first Spanish settlement in Pensacola was founded in 1559 by the explorer Tristan de Luna y Arenallo. He named it the “Bahia Santa Maria de Filipina.” With 1400 people arriving in 11 ships from Mexico, this was the first European settlement in what is now the United States. The colony was later nearly obliterated by a hurricane and the survivors abandoned it in 1561. It was concluded that Florida might be too dangerous to colonize. It was left alone for 135 years.

In 1693, Mexican Viceroy Gaspar de Sandoval Silva, Count of Galve, sent a small crew to inspect the gulf coast from north of the Pensacola bay to the mouth of the Mississippi (the Pensacola Pass). In order to see if the land was adequate for a settlement, they brought the renowned scientist and historian Carlos de Singuenza who renamed the bay “Santa Maria de Galve.” He authored a report that claimed the land was more than hospitable, it was a paradise. In 1698, a settlement was created by the Pensacola Pass that was used as a buffer against the French-owned Louisiana. Andres de Arriola was governor and found the conditions in Florida to be much more harsh than Siguenza had described.

The Spanish had become allies against the English in an attempt to try to prevent them from taking over the Southeast. However, in 1719, it was the French who took Pensacola with a fleet of ships and allied native warriors. The Spanish garrison commander wasn't even aware that a war had begun, so he had no choice but to surrender the fort with the conditions that the Spanish could continue living in the city, and the military men could return to a different fort. Another hurricane hit in 1722, so the French left the city, burning it, so it could not be taken back by the Spanish. The local Spanish created a new city, this time on the mainland instead of the barrier island (Santa Rosa) so it could be protected from large waves and severe weather.

-                 The Spanish (1722-1763)

-                 British West Florida (1763-1781)

-                 The Spanish (1781-1819)

The War of 1812 caused a power shift near the Pensacola Pass. The Spanish holdings in America were weakened, so the United States ended up taking over the area and created a navy yard and 3 forts around Pensacola.[6]

American era

Shortly after acquiring Florida from Spain, three forts were built to defend the inlet. Fort Barrancas was built on the mainland, Fort Pickens on Santa Rosa Island, and Fort McRee of Foster's Bank (now the eastern end of Perdido Key). Fort McRee was damaged in the Civil War and abandoned after the war. It eventually fell into the inlet as the island eroded away.

In the 1890s, shore batteries for the defense of Pensacola Bay were built at Forts Barrancas and Pickens and on Foster's Bank (Perdido Key), west of the ruins of the mid-19th century Fort McRee. The batteries were completed in 1900 and deactivated after the end of World War I. Construction of new defenses for Pensacola Bay started in 1940, with new batteries built at the three forts. Those batteries were deactivated when World War II ended in 1945. The ruins of batteries Center, Slemmer, and 233 on Perdido Key are preserved in the Perdido Key Historic District.[7][8]

Migration and dredging

Pensacola Pass is shifting westward due to longshore drift. The westward flowing longshore current accretes sand on the western end of Santa Rosa Island and erodes sand from eastern end of Perdido Key. The site of the original Fort McRee, built in 1830 on the eastern end of Perdido Key, was in the channel in the middle of Pensacola Pass by 1979. Pensacola Pass has been dredged since 1883 to maintain a channel into Pensacola Bay for United States Navy and other ships. The dredging has interrupted the natural transport of sand across the inlet from Santa Rosa Island to Perdido Key, with the result that Pensacola Pass is a net sediment sink. This has starved the eastern half of Perdido Key of sand, leading to the erosion of that part of the island. The easternmost part of the island is receiving sand dredged from the inlet in a beach nourishment project.[9][10][11]

2010 Gulf oil spill

Following the Deepwater Horizon oil spill (called the "Gulf oil spill"), the entrance to Pensacola Pass was closed,[12] with a floating barrier system in June 2010, to control tidal flow of oil entering from the Gulf of Mexico. The daily high tide was causing oil-contaminated water to enter Pensacola Bay. The barrier system was to be designed to allow boats to travel through Pensacola Pass during the ebb tide, but to close during the rising tide.

Although this was the initial plan, the booming plan was never fully implemented. Due to strong currents in the Pass, the boom broke. There was no alternative system in place in areas of less current, nor was there a plan to trap incoming oil, therefore oil product freely entered the Pass.[13]

Post-Oil Spill

The beaches in Pensacola were Ground Zero for the oil spill. Within two weeks of making landfall, the spill had taken over the Pensacola Pass. The Gulf Oil Spill killed local wildlife and devastated the ecosystem. Fish that didn't die were still inedible, so seafood restaurants suffered. The beaches were blackened, and tourism was devastated. Tourism was the main source of income for the area, so the economy was crippled in what many called a “lost summer.”[14]

Research shows that the major metropolitan areas between Pensacola and Panama City lost around $150 million combined per month in the months of June, July, August and September 2010. Bear in mind that 2010 was the tail end of the recession, so unemployment was already up to 10%. That summer, businesses reported 50%-80% drops in revenue.[14]

BP Oil agreed to pay millions in settlements to local environmental efforts and economic development. This helped rejuvenate the tourist industry which skyrocketed, going from $5.4 million in 2010 to $12.3 million in 2019.[14]

Aftermath

Recent research shows that beaches affected by the spill may take over 30 years to biodegrade.[15] However, local governments are working with volunteers to clean up the Pensacola beaches. In 2019, there were 447 petroleum cleanup sites managed with 28 sites being successfully cleaned up and closed.[16] Major protests continue for the burning of fossil fuels, such as oil, and spreading awareness of Climate Change. Days after the oil hit shore, President Obama visited the Panama beaches and claimed that there would be “unprecedented federal response” to the historic environmental disaster.

In response to the Deepwater Horizon incident, Escambia county, which received 97% of the oil in Florida and 52 miles of the shore oiled, passed the RESTORE Act (Resources and Ecosystems Sustainability, Tourist Opportunities and Revived Economies Act).[17] The Act states that penalty money received from the parties responsible for the oil spill will be used to protect the environment and economy of the Gulf Coast region. Other programs not under the RESTORE Act, such as the Natural Resources Damage Assessment or the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation were still funded separately through the oil spill fines.

Other Environmental Hazards in Pensacola

Pensacola recently ranked No. 12 in the United States for toxic releases per square mile. With pollution from industrial plants, landfills, septic tanks and more, the Pensacola area and Escambia county are in harsh conditions.

Pollution got so bad, in fact, that in 1999 there was a special grand jury assembled to assess local air and water quality. This jury found that local regulators had been failing their task of diminishing pollution. Major corporate industries were finding loopholes in regulations or managed to convince local governments to relax them. The grand jury ultimately issued 27 specific recommendations on how the county can protect its natural resources, but many believe that these suggestions are still being ignored.[18]

Pensacola has had multiple other major environmental disasters as well. There was the Saufley Field Landfill fire, where waste with certain toxicity levels was burnt. The fire produced hazardous gasses and particulate matter.[[18] This fire burnt for 4 months in 2005 and 2006. In 2017, there was the International Paper spill explosion that launched sticky black debris all over neighborhoods.

References

  1. ^ Work, Paul; Charles, Linda; Dean, Robert G. (June 1991). Perdido Key historical summary and interpretation of monitoring programs (Report). Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department, University of Florida. p. 18. Retrieved 2023-08-19 – via University of Florida Digital Collections.
  2. ^ "The Santa Rosa Island Shipwreck". 2012-12-09. Archived from the original on 2012-12-09. Retrieved 2020-10-20.
  3. ^ Dysart, Jane E. (1999). "Indians in Colonial Pensacola". In Bense, Judith Anne (ed.). Archaeology of colonial Pensacola. University Press of Florida. p. 61. ISBN 0-8130-1661-4.
  4. ^ Swanton, John Reed. (1952) The Indian Tribes of North America. Found at Google Books
    136
  5. ^ Gougeon, Ramie A. (2020). "New Frontier, Old Frontier". In Boudreaux, Edmond A. III; Meyers, Maureen; Johnson, Jay K. (eds.). Contact, Colonialism, and Native Communities in the Southeastern United States. University of Florida Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-1-6834-0117-9.
  6. ^ "Pensacola Bay", Wikipedia, 2020-09-17, retrieved 2020-10-20
  7. ^ Bearss, Edwin C. (March 1982). "Historic structure report and resource study: Pensacola harbor defense project, 1890-1947, Florida unit, Gulf Islands National Seashore, Escambia & Santa Rosa counties". State University Libraries of Florida. pp. 123–139, 141–152, 293–295. Retrieved 2023-08-22.
  8. ^ "National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form - Perdido Key Historic District" (PDF). National Park Service History. December 11, 1979. Retrieved August 20, 2023.
  9. ^ Work, Paul; Charles, Linda; Dean, Robert G. (June 1991). Perdido Key historical summary and interpretation of monitoring programs (Report). Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department, University of Florida. pp. 17, 21–22, 27. Retrieved 2023-08-19 – via University of Florida Digital Collections.
  10. ^ "National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form - Perdido Key Historic District" (PDF). National Park Service History. December 11, 1979. Retrieved August 20, 2023.
  11. ^ Schupp, Courtney A. (August 2019). Gulf Islands National Seashore Geologic Resources Inventory Report (PDF). National Park Service (Report). pp. 2, 18–20, 30. Retrieved August 19, 2023.
  12. ^ "Unified Command for the BP Oil Spill | Pensacola Pass to Close", DH-27.
  13. ^ "The City of Gulf Breeze Deep Water Horizon Oil Spill Response Plan" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-10-06. Retrieved 2012-09-24.
  14. ^ a b c Robinson, Kevin. "Pensacola ranks No. 12 in U.S. for toxic releases per square mile". Pensacola News Journal. Retrieved 2020-10-20.
  15. ^ Hinchliffe, Alli. "FSU research finds Deepwater Horizon Oil in Gulf Coast beaches may take over 30 years to biodegrade". FSView. Retrieved 2020-10-20.
  16. ^ "About Us | Florida Department of Health in Escambia". escambia.floridahealth.gov. Retrieved 2020-10-20.
  17. ^ "RESTORE Act". myescambia.
  18. ^ a b "Health Consultation" (PDF). August 1, 2007.

30°19′41″N 87°18′29″W / 30.328°N 87.308°W / 30.328; -87.308

Read other articles:

Milli & Nathanposter filmSutradara Hanny R. Saputra Produser Frederica Ditulis oleh Titien Wattimena PemeranChrist LaurentOlivia Lubis JensenSabai MorscheckChaca Rasidy AriefiansyahFendy ChowFrans TumbuanMinati AtmanegaraHIM DamsyikMario LawalataUwie JasmineDave AlexanderDimas BeckPenata musikRamondo GascaroDono FirmanSinematograferYunus PasolangPenyuntingRobby BarusDistributorFalcon PicturesTanggal rilis23 Juni 2011Negara Indonesia Bahasa Indonesia Milli & Nathan adalah film dr...

 

Ethnic group Kurds in NorwayKurdish demonstration against ISIS in Norway, 12 May 2016Total population7,100 (2013 official estimate of Kurdish speakers[1])-25,000 (2016 Kurdish Institute of Paris estimate[2])Regions with significant populationsOsloLanguagesNorwegian, Kurdish languagesRelated ethnic groupsKurdish diaspora   Part of a series on: Kurdish history and Kurdish culture People List of Kurds Population Homeland Kurdistan Turkey (Northern Kurdistan) Iran (Eastern Ku...

 

Premio Göran Gustafsson Ceremonia con los ganadores del premio 2010.Ubicación SueciaHistoriaPrimera entrega 1991Sitio web oficial[editar datos en Wikidata] El Premio Göran Gustafsson es un premio nacional sueco por logros científicos sobresalientes que la Real Academia de las Ciencias de Suecia otorga anualmente en las disciplinas de Química, Matemáticas, Medicina, Biología Molecular y Física. Fue creado por medio de una donación del empresario sueco Göran Gustafsson y asc...

 

Hof van Beroep voor het 3e circuitCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit Het James A. Byrne United States Courthouse, zetel van het hof Type Hof van Beroep Werktalen Engels Jurisdictie Delaware New Jersey Pennsylvania Amerikaanse Maagdeneilanden Zittingsplaats(en) James A. Byrne U.S. CourthousePhiladelphia, Pennsylvania Geschiedenis Opgericht 16 juni 1891 Samenstelling Samenstelling 1 president13 rechters10 senior rechters President D. Brooks Smith Circuitrechter Samuel Alito Website ca3.usco...

 

Friedrich Graf von Luxburg (1875) Friedrich Reinhard Karl Ludwig Graf von Luxburg (* 21. August 1829 in Laubegast; † 23. November 1905 in Würzburg) war ein bayerischer Kämmerer und Regierungspräsident von Unterfranken. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Herkunft 2 Leben 3 Familie 4 Ehrungen 5 Sonstiges 6 Literatur 7 Weblinks 8 Einzelnachweise Herkunft Friedrich Graf von Luxburg (Graf-Luxburg-Museum, Aschach) Friedrich Graf von Luxburg entstammte dem Ratsgeschlecht der Girtanner aus St. Gallen (Schweiz...

 

2021 non-fiction book by Paul McCartney and Paul Muldoon The Lyrics: 1956 to the Present EditorPaul MuldoonAuthorPaul McCartneyCountryUKLanguageEnglishSubjectPaul McCartney's lyricsPublishedNovember 2, 2021PublisherLiveright, Penguin Books Ltd, C.H. BeckPages960ISBN978-1-63149-256-3WebsiteOfficial website The Lyrics: 1956 to the Present is a book released in November 2021 by the English musician Paul McCartney and the Irish poet Paul Muldoon. It is published by Penguin Books Ltd in the United...

 

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Louis VII, Duke of Bavaria – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Louis VIIBornc. 1368Died(1447-05-01)1 May 1447BurghausenNoble familyHouse of WittelsbachSpouse(s)Anne de Bourbon-L...

 

Ruud Gullit Ruud Gullit in 2010 Persoonlijke informatie Volledige naam Rudi Dil Bijnaam De Zwarte Tulp[1] Geboortedatum 1 september 1962 Geboorteplaats Amsterdam, Nederland Lengte 191[2] cm Positie Aanvaller, middenvelder Clubinformatie Voetbalcarrière geëindigd in 1998 Jeugd 1967–1975 1975–1978 1978 De Meerboys DWS HFC Haarlem Senioren Seizoen Club W 0(G) 1979–1982 1982–1985 1985–1987 1987–1993 1993–1994 1994 1994–1995 1995–1998 HFC Haarlem Feyenoord PSV A...

 

Japanese video game designer (born 1963) The native form of this personal name is Kojima Hideo. This article uses Western name order when mentioning individuals. Hideo Kojima小島 秀夫Kojima in 2018Born (1963-08-24) August 24, 1963 (age 60)[1]Setagaya, Tokyo, JapanOccupationsVideo game designerwriterdirectorproducerYears active1986–presentNotable workMetal Gear, Snatcher, Policenauts, Zone of the Enders, Death StrandingTitleExecutive Vice President and Corporate Off...

 

توماس فالدوخ (بالبولندية: Tomasz Wałdoch)‏    معلومات شخصية الميلاد 10 مايو 1971 (52 سنة)  غدانسك[1]  الطول 1.87 م (6 قدم 1 1⁄2 بوصة) مركز اللعب مدافع الجنسية بولندا ألمانيا  مسيرة الشباب سنوات فريق 1986–1988 Stoczniowiec Gdańsk المسيرة الاحترافية1 سنوات فريق م. (هـ.) 1988–1995 غو

 

Naughty Dog, Inc.IndustriPermainan videoDidirikan1986KantorpusatSanta Monica, CATokohkunciEvan WellsChristophe BalestraProdukUncharted: Drake's FortuneSerial Jak & DaxterSerial Crash BandicootKaryawan85IndukSony Computer EntertainmentSitus webhttp://www.naughtydog.com/ Naughty Dog adalah perusahaan permainan video Amerika Serikat yang didirikan oleh Andy Gavin dan Jason Rubin pada tahun 1986, dan berbasis di Santa Monica, California. Perusahaan ini diperoleh oleh Sony pada tahun 2001. Pro...

 

Ця стаття є сирим перекладом з іншої мови. Можливо, вона створена за допомогою машинного перекладу або перекладачем, який недостатньо володіє обома мовами. Будь ласка, допоможіть поліпшити переклад. Пьер Гюстав Тутан БорегарPGT Beauregard Ім'я при народженні англ. Pierre Gustave Toutant d...

 

Town in Punjab, PakistanChak Amru چک امرُوTownChak AmruCoordinates: 32°22′23″N 75°10′38″E / 32.373148°N 75.177158°E / 32.373148; 75.177158CountryPakistanProvincePunjabElevation271 m (889 ft)Time zoneUTC+5 (PST) Chak Amru (Urdu: چک امرُو) is a town of Shakargarh tehsil in Narowal district of Punjab province of the Pakistan.[1][2] It is located near Pakistan-India border. Chak Amru town has a railway Station called Chak...

 

Deity in Wicca and some forms of Neopaganism This article is about the Wiccan deity. For gods with horns or antlers on their heads, see Horned deity. Horned GodGod of nature, wilderness, sexuality, huntingConsortTriple Goddess Part of a series onWiccaPentagram History of Wicca History of Wicca Etymology of Wicca Bricket Wood coven New Forest coven Dettmer v. Landon Witch-cult hypothesis Notable figures Gerald Gardner Doreen Valiente Alex Sanders Maxine Sanders Sybil Leek Dafo Margot Adler Vic...

 

中华人民共和国天津海事法院 主要领导 院长 张勉 ?级高级法官 机构概况 上诉法院 天津市高级人民法院 业务上级机构 天津市高级人民法院 组织上级机构 天津市人民代表大会天津市人民代表大会常务委员会 机构类型 专门人民法院 行政级别 正地厅级 授权法源 中华人民共和国宪法 组织法规 中华人民共和国人民法院组织法 上级中共组织 中国共产党天津市委员会 本级�...

 

El algoritmo de Verlet es un procedimiento para la integración numérica de ecuaciones diferenciales ordinarias de segundo orden con valores iniciales conocidos (problema de Cauchy). Es particularmente apropiado en las situaciones en que la expresión de la segunda derivada solo es función de las variables, dependiente o independiente, sin participar la primera derivada. Este es el caso de numerosos problemas de la dinámica newtoniana, por lo que se emplea frecuentemente en astronomía y m...

 

American adult animated sitcom ArcherAlso known as Archer Vice (season 5) Archer: Dreamland (season 8) Archer: Danger Island (season 9) Archer: 1999 (season 10) Genre Animated sitcom Adult animation Action comedy Black comedy Adventure Workplace comedy Created byAdam ReedVoices of H. Jon Benjamin Judy Greer Chris Parnell Aisha Tyler Jessica Walter Amber Nash Adam Reed George Coe Lucky Yates Dave Willis Jeffrey Tambor Kayvan Novak Theme music composer Scott Sims Mel Young JG Thirlwell (S7–pr...

 

Expressway in Harbin of Heilongjiang Province, China Harbin Ring Expressway哈尔滨绕城高速公路Route informationLength91.2 km (56.7 mi)Major junctionsOrbital around Harbin LocationCountryChina Highway system National Trunk Highway System Primary Auxiliary National Highways Transport in China ← G10→ G1011 The Harbin Ring Expressway (Chinese: 哈尔滨绕城高速), designated as G1001, is an expressway in Heilongjiang, Northeast China orbiting the city of Harbin. ...

 

こうふし 甲府市 愛宕山から甲府市街と南アルプスを望む 酒折宮甲斐善光寺昇仙峡 躑躅ヶ崎館信玄公祭り 和田峠から望む甲府盆地の夜景甲府鳥もつ煮 JITス 甲府市旗1906年10月13日制定 甲府市章1906年10月13日制定 国 日本地方 中部地方(甲信越地方)都道府県 山梨県市町村コード 19201-5法人番号 1000020192015 面積 212.47km2総人口 186,803人 [編集](推計人口、2024年2月1日)�...

 

Archaeological excavation site in Java in Indonesia Sangiran Early Man SiteUNESCO World Heritage SiteReplica of fossil from Sangiran (Sangiran 17)LocationIndonesiaCriteriaCultural: iii, viReference593Inscription1996 (20th Session)Area5,600 haCoordinates7°27′S 110°50′E / 7.450°S 110.833°E / -7.450; 110.833Location of Sangiran in Indonesia Homo sapiens Ngrejeng (40 kya) Sangiran is an archaeological excavation site in Java in Indonesia.[1] According to a ...