X

Get Social With Us

like watch follow

X

Receive Email Updates

Sign up today and receive our newsletter and more directly to your inbox.

Email
Name
X

Search Sarasota History

contact us follow us newsletter sign up search this site

A June Wedding

Articles: Sarasota History

Author: Ann A. Shank, former County Historian
Photo Credit: Sarasota County History Center

Sarasota History - A June Wedding photo

A June wedding appealed to Mabel Stuart Helveston and Homer Lincoln Hebb, who were married on the 15th of that month in 1923. This photo shows the clothing styles of the day and stories in the Sarasota Times reflect some of the customs. In early June 1923, the paper reported on a party held in honor of the bride-elect. The guests hemmed tea towels that were then presented to Miss Helveston. Her mother won the prize for the best hemming, a blue bud vase.

On returning from their honeymoon, the newlyweds were greeted with an unusual reception. The Sarasota Times noted that they had escaped the usual shower of rice after the marriage ceremony. Thus, when they arrived back in Sarasota, "Their friends turned out with the fire department truck, forced the newlyweds to get upon the radiator hood of the big red truck, and the serenade that followed up and down local streets was noisy enough to bring out the entire town. An orchestra with Leon Pickett as the leading actor, discoursed music along the way." They moved into a not-quite-finished house on Alta Vista Street and spent the next 50 years there.

Mabel Helveston was a great-granddaughter of William and Mary Whitaker, 1840s settlers at Yellow Bluffs, near the west end of 12th Street. She later recalled that her home at Indian Beach was so far from the school on Main Street that she was taught at home until about the fourth grade.

Homer Hebb came to Sarasota as a child. His father operated a sawmill on Cedar Point (now Golden Gate Point) and during the 1920s opened a boat shop on the bayfront. Hebb built boats with his father and participated in several community and civic organizations.

Special Thanks to Ann A. Shank, former County Historian, Sarasota County History Center for her research and time devoted to writing this article. 


You Might Also Like

Bovine Battle Proved to be Tough

By: Ann A. Shank, former County Historian

Ninety-six years ago, Sarasota ceased to be an open town - open that is, to livestock roaming through town at will.

See More

Hurricane hit Sarasota in 1921

By: Ann A. Shank, former County Historian

In 1921 hurricanes were not named, but the one in October of that year left a lasting impression on those who experienced it. Beginning with rain on Saturday, October the 22nd, the storm left the Sarasota bayfront a shambles by Tuesday.

See More

Land Emerged as Prime Real Estate

By: Ann A. Shank, former County Historian

Early residents of Sarasota called it Cedar Point. Today it includes Golden Gate Point and Sunset Park. The original 1886 plat of Sarasota did not include Cedar Point. It was a T-shaped piece of land extending west from the southern end of Banana Avenue (now North Tamiami Trail), and much of it was swampy or under water part of the time. The cross bar of the "T" lay in a north-south direction at the western edge of the point.

See More

Sarasota Times on Main Street

C.V.S. Wilson and his wife Rose are pictured here at Sarasota's first newspaper, the Sarasota Times.

See More