Flagler Memorial Presbyterian Church, Valencia & Sevilla Streets, Saint Augustine, St. Johns County, FL

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Flagler Memorial Presbyterian Church, Valencia & Sevilla Streets, Saint Augustine, St. Johns County, FL

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Summary

Significance: The Memorial Presbyterian Church was donated in 1890 to the St. Augustine First Presbyterian Church by Henry M. Flagler as a memorial to his recently deceased daughter. Flagler, a millionaire philanthropist who originally made a fortune as a business colleague of John D. Rockefeller in Standard Oil, was almost single-handedly responsible for the late 19th-century development of the West Florida Coast as a fashionable resort area. The son of a Presbyterian minister, he was particularly concerned with that church in the first of this Florida resort ventures St. Augustine. He therefore donated this structure, the land, and the former parsonage (also built at the same time as the church) to the First Presbyterian Church Congregation, in return for their former properties at the corner of St. George and Hypolita Streets, upon which Flagler had the Municipal Building built (1890) for the city.
Survey number: HABS FL-170
Building/structure dates: 1890 Initial Construction

In 1862, John D. Rockefeller, a resident of Cleveland Ohio, joined with two partners to establish an oil-refining company. The men purchased oil wells in Titusville, Pennsylvania, and constructed a well near Cleveland. In 1865, Rockefeller bought out one of the partners' interest in the company, creating Rockefeller & Andrews Oil Company. In this year alone, the business earned approximately 200,000 dollars. While Rockefeller reaped extensive wealth in 1865, the oil industry was just beginning to grow. Most people only used oil for lighting. The market was limited. Prices fluctuated dramatically, as oil production waxed and waned during this period. To try and stabilize oil prices Rockefeller and Samuel Andrews, his partner, approached O.H. Payne, owner of the largest oil refinery in Cleveland. They proposed that the three men unite their companies together. By having a single oil company operating in northeastern Ohio, this company could hopefully fix prices and avoid the tremendous swings as production sometimes increased or dwindled. The company organizers convinced numerous other Cleveland firms to join with them. In other cases, they bought out the companies or drove them out of business by selling their oil for a much cheaper price than their competitors could. In 1870, Rockefeller united these companies together as the Standard Oil Company.

date_range

Date

1933 - 1970
person

Contributors

Historic American Buildings Survey, creator
Cariere & Hastings
McQuire & McDonald
place

Location

create

Source

Library of Congress
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Copyright info

No known restrictions on images made by the U.S. Government; images copied from other sources may be restricted. http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/114_habs.html

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