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Hawkshaw

112 bytes added, 18:42, 1 March 2009
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<div style="float:right; margin-left:10px;"><googlemap version="0.9" lat="30.414631" lon="-87.200589" zoom="15" width="300" height="250">3#C59C75 B29D5900 (#C5A6754C9D5900)
30.417192, -87.205774
30.410588, -87.204208
Archaeologists have discovered evidence of a Native American occupation, designated the [[Deptford]] culture, which inhabited the area from about 150 [[Wikipedia:Common Era|CE]].
During Pensacola's [[first second Spanish period]], in the mid-18th century, the area was the site of a brick kiln. Under [[British period|British rule]], the Hawkshaw area was home to the [[Governor's Villa]], a complex built for West Florida Governor [[Peter Chester]] and burned during the Spanish recapture of Pensacola in [[1781]].
Following the [[transfer of Florida]] to the United States in [[1821]], the area was planned as part of a "'''[[New City]]'''" to serve the burgeoning railroad industry. The [[New City Hotel]] was built in [[1836]] in anticipation of the district's growth, but the plan ultimately failed, and Hawkshaw became a predominantly black, working-class neighborhood for stevedores and other industrial workers. The Hawkshaw waterfront included [[Wright's Lumber Mill]], [[Muscogee Wharf]] and a number of [[L&N Railroad]] facilities, including the [[roundhouse]].
The first documented use of the name "Hawkshaw" is on a black-and-white photograph of the area which has "Hawkshaw ... 1939" handwritten on its face.<ref>''Archaeology and History at Hawshaw''(1985). Written and illustrated by D. C. Dusevitch, Edited by Judith A. Bense</ref>
*[[Veterans Memorial Park]]
*[[Hawkshaw Lagoon Memorial Park]]
 
==Other images==
<gallery>
Image:Hawkshaw1939.jpg|[[1939]]
</gallery>
==References==
{{hist-stub}}
[[Category:Hawkshaw|Hawkshaw]] [[Category:Neighborhoods]] [[Category:ArchaeologyAnthropology and archaeology]]