Difference between revisions of "The Towers"

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[[Image:BaarsHome-Interior.jpg|thumb|right|Interior of the Baars home]]
 
[[Image:BaarsHome-Interior.jpg|thumb|right|Interior of the Baars home]]
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'''Cordova Towers''' (also known as '''Cordova''' or '''The Towers''') was the name of the 14-room home and estate built by [[Henry Baars|Henry]] and [[Mary Ellison Baars]] in {{date needed}}. The house was located on the eastern shore of [[Bayou Texar]], just south of the current [[Baars Park]]. It was named for the Spanish city of [[Wikipedia:Córdoba, Spain|Córdoba]], which the Baarses had visited in their travels. The oak trees that form the "[[tree tunnel]]" on [[12th Avenue]] were planted as a driveway leading to the estate.
'''Cordova''' was the name of the '''Baars family home''' built by [[Henry Baars|Henry]] and [[Mary Ellison Baars]] in {{date needed}}. The house was located on the eastern shore of [[Bayou Texar]], just south of the current [[Baars Park]].
 
  
Mary Ellison intended to develop the surrounding area with vacation homes for wealthy northerners, and the oak trees that form the [[tree tunnel]] on [[12th Avenue]] were planted for that purpose. However, the plan was scrapped when economic conditions soured, and the area was eventually developed as the [[Cordova Park]] neighborhood.
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Mary Ellison intended to develop the surrounding area — from [[Davis Highway]] to [[Escambia Bay]] — with vacation homes for wealthy northerners. She had plans made for three-bedroom, one-bath houses that would range from $4,000 to $7,000 in price, completely furnished with groundskeepers to tend the yards.<ref>"Baars Meant Serious Business With City's Early Development." ''Pensacola News'', March 7-11, 1983.</ref> She also envisioned a hydroelectric plant that would be placed in [[Carpenter's Creek]]. Baars died in [[1923]] before any work started, however, and the plan was scrapped when economic conditions soured; the [[Cordova Park]] neighborhood was eventually developed on the eastern side of [[Bayou Texar]], and much of the estate to the north became the [[Cordova business district]].
  
In the 1940s the home was owned by Philip G. and Eleanor DuPont Rust of Wilmington, Delaware.<ref>Del Alexa Eagan Jupiter. ''[http://books.google.com/books?id=u1lKAAAAMAAJ Agustina of Spanish West Florida and Her Descendants]''. Genealogy Pub. Service, 1994.</ref> It was demolished in {{date needed}}.
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In the 1940s the Cordova Towers home was owned by Philip G. and Eleanor DuPont Rust of Wilmington, Delaware.<ref>Del Alexa Eagan Jupiter. ''[http://books.google.com/books?id=u1lKAAAAMAAJ Agustina of Spanish West Florida and Her Descendants]''. Genealogy Pub. Service, 1994.</ref> It was demolished in {{date needed}}. [[Mary Firestone Baars]] donated the land for [[Baars Park]] to the [[City of Pensacola]] in {{date needed}}.
  
 
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Latest revision as of 12:57, 29 January 2017

Interior of the Baars home

Cordova Towers (also known as Cordova or The Towers) was the name of the 14-room home and estate built by Henry and Mary Ellison Baars in (date needed). The house was located on the eastern shore of Bayou Texar, just south of the current Baars Park. It was named for the Spanish city of Córdoba, which the Baarses had visited in their travels. The oak trees that form the "tree tunnel" on 12th Avenue were planted as a driveway leading to the estate.

Mary Ellison intended to develop the surrounding area — from Davis Highway to Escambia Bay — with vacation homes for wealthy northerners. She had plans made for three-bedroom, one-bath houses that would range from $4,000 to $7,000 in price, completely furnished with groundskeepers to tend the yards.[1] She also envisioned a hydroelectric plant that would be placed in Carpenter's Creek. Baars died in 1923 before any work started, however, and the plan was scrapped when economic conditions soured; the Cordova Park neighborhood was eventually developed on the eastern side of Bayou Texar, and much of the estate to the north became the Cordova business district.

In the 1940s the Cordova Towers home was owned by Philip G. and Eleanor DuPont Rust of Wilmington, Delaware.[2] It was demolished in (date needed). Mary Firestone Baars donated the land for Baars Park to the City of Pensacola in (date needed).

References[edit]

  1. "Baars Meant Serious Business With City's Early Development." Pensacola News, March 7-11, 1983.
  2. Del Alexa Eagan Jupiter. Agustina of Spanish West Florida and Her Descendants. Genealogy Pub. Service, 1994.