pinellas County

Pinellas County Accident Lawyer

Personal Injury Attorney

Information contained in this section of our personal injury lawyer website has been republished for your convince from Pinellas county government websites and official organizations. Please feel free to contact our firm with any request for removal or information updates.

Please click here for personal injury lawyer contact information.

About Pinellas From pinellascounty.org

Pinellas County is a peninsula bordered by the Gulf of Mexico on the west and by Tampa Bay on the east. The county is 38 miles long and 15 miles wide at its broadest point. Its land area covers approximately 264 square miles.

Pinellas is derived from the Spanish words Punta Pinal meaning "point of pines." That was an accurate description for this area when it was discovered by Panfilo de Narvaez in 1528, 36 years after Columbus arrived in the Caribbean and 37 years before the founding of St. Augustine. Narvaez and 400 soldiers, probably the first Europeans in this area, primarily came looking for gold and silver.

Instead they found the Tocobagan Indians, an agricultural tribe that had occupied the peninsula for hundreds of years. Narvaez and his crew treated them cruelly, ransacked their huts, and pillaged their ceremonial mounds, but found no treasure. Hernando de Soto and other Spanish intruders also came to this area of Florida looking for treasures but fared no better.

It was another 300 years before the first white settler, Odet Philippe, landed on the shores of Tampa Bay sometime in the early 1830s. He established his plantation, St. Helena, on the site of what is now Philippe Park in Safety Harbor. Philippe is credited with planting the first citrus grove in the area and was instrumental in beginning Florida's citrus industry.

Federal homesteading legislation, passed in 1842, opened up the area to settlers who came to claim their 160 acres. Completion of the Orange Belt Railroad to St. Petersburg in 1888 assured continued growth and development of the peninsula. Entrepreneurs built elaborate hotels to entice wealthy investors and tourists. The Belleview, later the Belleview-Biltmore,  was finished in 1897. A famous Baltimore doctor, F.A. Davis, wrote glowing reports describing Clearwater Harbor as "the most healthful location." Many who came for their health decided to stay.

Before 1912, Pinellas was part of Hillsborough County and was known as West Hillsborough. Arduous trips to Tampa over marshy lands and often impassable wagon trails for meetings, plus a growing resentment at not getting a fair share of benefits for taxes paid, created pressure for secession. After years of political maneuvering and conniving, a bill finally passed both houses of the Florida Legislature. Following an overwhelming local referendum vote, Pinellas became a separate county on January 1, 1912. The population was 13,000. Clearwater was designated the County seat.

The growth of Pinellas County has been steady but with its share of ups and downs. The euphoria of boom times was frequently interrupted with the reality of "busts"-the stock market crash and depressions, hurricanes, wars, and over-speculation. The years after World War II brought thousands of new residents attracted by Florida's reputation as a tropical paradise and its promise of new opportunities. Pinellas County has grown steadily over the years. Its population estimate in 1997 was 893,468 permanent residents with an additional 40,921 seasonal residents.

If the early explorers were to return today, they would find their "gold" in the form of tourism, which has become Pinellas County's most important industry. An estimated 4,251,045 visitors added almost $2 billion to the Pinellas economy in 1997.
pinellascounty.org website

 

County Docs:

2007 DEC N

CME

NH_Criteria

RTF_Criteria

special_needs_defined

Weather_Report_guide

 

 

 

Free Case Evaluation



Tampa Justice Attorney Spotlight

 

Richard D. Kriseman, Esq. Richard D. Kriseman: born in Detroit, MI, August 2, 1962. Admitted to the Florida State Bar in 1987. Also admitted to practice in the United States District Court, Middle District of Florida and the United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit.

 

Florida House of Representatives, District 53, 2006-present

View Attorney Profile

Quick Contact

Your Name:

Street Address:


E-mail Address:

Phone Number:

City:

State:

Zip:
Please briefly explain your situation:

 

Yes No - I agree that the information that I will receive in response to the above question is general information and I will not be charged for the response to this e-mail question.

Yes - I agree that the above does not constitute a request for legal advice and that I am not forming an attorney client relationship by submitting this question.

By Clicking the appropriate box below, I agree to: