1739–1748 War of Jenkins' Ear. English mapping expeditions visit Pinellas Peninsula.
1757 Spanish expedition renames Tampa Bay "La Bahia de San Fernando", after the Spanish king. Names entrance to Tampa Bay "La Punta de Pinal de Jimenez" (Point of Pines).[2]: 18
1843 Antonio Maximo Hernandez settles on what is now Maximo point in St. Petersburg.[4]: 17
1848 Egmont Key lighthouse is built only to be destroyed later that year by the Great Gale, which flooded much of Pinellas.[4]: 18
On September 27, 1848, a strong hurricane struck the West Coast of Florida. It separated the barrier island on the coast and created a waterway known today as John's Pass. John Levique, along with Joseph Silva, was the one who discovered it and named it after himself.
1855 Public school opens on land donated by John Taylor on site of present Clearwater High School.[4]: 21
1859 Clear Water Harbor (later Clearwater, Florida) becomes first community on Pinellas. The first post office in Pinellas established there.[3]: 4
1868 Anna Germain and John Donaldson are the first African-Americans to settle in lower Pinellas.[4]: 33 Road opens from Yellow Bluff (Ozona, Florida) to Tampa.[5]: 218
1869 Organized hunting parties strive to eradicate black bears and Florida panthers that threaten Pinellas cattle industry.[4]: 34
1876 "Pinellas Village" obtains first post office in what is now St. Petersburg.[4]: 36
1884 Disston City (future Gulfport) plat filed.[4]: 44
1885 Pinellas's healthsome climate extolled at American Medical Society convention in New Orleans.[3]: 4
1886 First house on Passe-a-Grille Island built.[4]: 46
1887 Tarpon Springs became the first incorporated city on the peninsula.[3]: 4
1893 St. Petersburg's first bank organized.[4]: 61
1894 Hillsborough Times moves from Clearwater to St. Petersburg and is renamed The St. Petersburg Times.[4]: 62
1895 St. Petersburg prohibits cows with bells from wandering within town limits.[4]: 64 Henry B. Plant buys Orange Belt Railroad.[5]: 251
1897 Henry Plant opens Belleview Biltmore.[4]: 68 St. Petersburg Electric Light and Power Company, the future Florida Power Corporation, is chartered.[4]: 69
1900 First land-based hotel built on St. Petersburg's gulf beaches.[4]: 71
1905 St. Petersburg Reading Room and Library Association founded.[4]: 83 Town of Largo incorporated, becoming the first municipality in Pinellas County to adopt a Council–manager government.[2]: 33
1914 Aviation history was made in St. Petersburg as Tony Jannus made the world's first scheduled airline flight with the St. Petersburg–Tampa Airboat Line from St. Petersburg to Tampa.[3]: 4
1914 Tampa and Gulf Coast Railroad extended to St. Petersburg. First SAL train arrives September 22.
1921 Real estate boom period begins Pinellas. Severe hurricane causes significant destruction throughout Pinellas County. Creates Hurricane Pass between what are now Caladesi and Honeymoon islands.[3]: 5 Forts Dade and De Soto deactivated.[4]: 137
1923 County passes bond issue to build roads and bridges.[4]: 137
1924 The Gandy Bridge opens, halving the distance between St. Petersburg and Tampa. The bridge was the longest automobile toll bridge in the world.[3]: 5
1925 Palm Harbor named.[5]: 259 St. Petersburg Kennel Club begins greyhound racing at what will become Derby Lane.[4]: 142 Northern watchdog groups warn of impending collapse of Florida real estate market.[4]: 146
1926. Real estate boom ends, severely stressing local economy.[3]: 5 Bee Line Ferry begins service between Pinellas and Manatee Counties.[4]: 152
1927 American Legion Hospital for Crippled Children is founded.[4]: 154
1928 County Commission deputizes Impounding Masters to keep cattle inside county pasture.[5]R. E. Olds sells holdings in Oldsmar and buys Fort Harrison Hotel.[5]: 107
1930 City of St. Petersburg defaults on its bonds, a year after Great Depression begins.[4]: 165
1934 The Davis (Courtney Campbell) Causeway connects Clearwater more directly with Tampa.
1968 St. Petersburg Symphony Orchestra merges with Tampa Philharmonic to become Florida Gulf Coast Orchestra.[4]: 208
1969 Boca Ciega Bay becomes Florida's first aquatic preserve.[4]: 216 C. Bette Wimbish becomes first African_American elected to the St. Petersburg City Council.[4]: 250
1970 The Central Pinellas Transit Authority provides public transportation to areas north of St. Petersburg.[3]: 6
1971 Amtrak takes over railroad passenger service from the Seaboard Coast Line.
1972 Judge James Sanderlin becomes the first African-American elected to county-wide office.[4]: 259
1973 Community services and facilities are outpaced by a tremendous surge of new growth and development during the early 1970s.[3]: 6
1974 Comprehensive Land Use Plan is the first formal countywide attempt to manage growth in Pinellas County.[3]: 6 200 acres (0.81 km2) of Egmont Key set aside as national wildlife refuge.[4]: 262
1975 Church of Scientology purchases Fort Harrison Hotel.[4]: 266 [9][10] (Since arriving in Clearwater in 1975, the Church of Scientology has bought 60 properties in Pinellas County under its name: 58 are in the city of Clearwater and 49 are downtown. About 72 percent of those properties are tax exempt for religious uses.)[11]
1976 * Hubbard's Marina, named for a longtime Pinellas family that owned the entire marina from the mid-1970s to 2008.[12][13]
The Pinellas County Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) replaces the Pinellas County Transportation Authority as a countywide transportation planning organization.[3]: 6
the Church of Scientology, had purchased two Clearwater landmarks[14]
1977 Pinellas County's Heritage Park opens an exhibit of historically significant Pinellas County structures.[3]: 7 Corrine Freeman becomes St. Petersburg's first woman mayor.[4]: 268
1978 Egmont Key named to the national register of Historic Places.[4]: 262
1980 Portions of the southbound span of the Sunshine Skyway Bridge collapse after being hit by the freighter MV Summit Venture.[3]: 6 County voters approve Home Rule Charter.[3]: 7
1983 Pinellas County opens its new Resource Recovery Plant.[3]: 7
1984 Amtrak discontinues passenger train service in Pinellas.[3]: 7 Countywide bus service is implemented in Pinellas County with the absorption of the St. Petersburg Municipal Transit System into the Pinellas Suncoast Transit Authority.[3]: 7 Florida Gulf Coast orchestra becomes The Florida Orchestra.[4]: 208
1985 Severe drought results in watering restrictions.[3]: 7 A four-cent local option gas tax is passed by the Board of County Commissioners. Hurricane Elena threatens Florida.[3]: 7
1990 First segment of Pinellas Trail opens between Dunedin and Seminole. Former SCL railroad right of way had been purchased in 1983.
1998 Devil Rays open in Thunder Dome, renamed Tropicana Field. Calvin Harris becomes first African American County Commissioner.[4]: 312
2000 Charter amendment adopted to end annexation wars among municipalities and county.[15]
2004 Four hurricanes narrowly miss Pinellas County, causing minor damage.[16]
Construction of a parking garage at John's Pass.[17]
2006 Litigation dance between Largo and Pinellas County continues.[18] Court rules Pinellas County acted wrongly in limiting the annexation authority of municipalities.[19]
2009 – The Church of Scientology is reopening its lavishly renovated Fort Harrison Hotel after pouring $40 million.[20][21][22]
John's Pass Village filed for bankruptcy[23] As of 2022 is still in the Fishing Boat Charter Business just renting from Jimmy Hart & Ben Mallah paid $17.2 million at an online auction and later in 2021 Menna's Landing condominium building[24] The Hubbard family has been a major player at John's Pass since Patricia Hubbard's parents, Wilson and Lorraine Hubbard, moved from nearby Pass-a-Grille to John's Pass in the 1970s.[24]
2019 A record in price for a gulfront mansion that was constructed in 2004 set a record in price for Pinellas County. The $250,000,000 real estate investor Ben Mallah paid cash for this $16.5 million waterfront estate,[25] by far the most ever paid for a residential property in the Tampa Bay area. Originally built by Ryan Howard, nicknamed the Big Piece", is an American former professional baseballfirst baseman. Howard spent his entire Major League Baseball (MLB) career playing for the Philadelphia Phillies, from 2004 to 2016. The house sits on a 2 1/2-acre lot on a private beach and features such amenities as a two-story paneled library, a bowling alley, large wine cellar and a huge pool.[26] Ben and Karla Mallah own this 39,000 square mansion on the Gulf of Mexico.
^ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadPinellas County Planning Department as staff for the Pinellas County Planning Council. (PCPD) Pinellas County Historical Background. No city. No date.