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435 NW ENTERPRISE DR., PORT SAINT LUCIE, FL 34986
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Have you changed the title of your
property by assigning it to a trust
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Phone: 772.462.1000
2300 Virginia Avenue, Room 107
Fort Pierce, FL 34982
1664 SE Walton Road, Room 219
Port Saint Lucie, FL 34952
Our Promise to You…
Superior Service,
Trusted Results
Michelle Franklin, CFA
Saint Lucie County
Property Appraiser
and the Sunrise Theatre.
A local history buff, Hudson thinks the festival
serves an important purpose to people who live here
and think they know the history or part-time residents
who hunger for a sense of place.
“Many of these people spend half a year here or at
some point they’re going to be living here full time,”
she said. “They know about their hometowns in Ohio,
but they really don’t know anything about the history
of the place.”
The other two sessions were also well attended.
Andrew Frank, an ethnohistorian who specializes in
the history of the Florida Seminoles and the Native
South, presented Modern By Tradition: Innovation &
Transformation of Seminole Culture. The lecture was the
first in a series of six presented by the Florida Humanities
Council. It was co-sponsored by Main Street Fort
Pierce and the A.E. Backus Museum & Gallery.
Allen Balogh, a retired educator who wrote Black
Sails 1715, a historical novel about the sinking of the
Spanish treasure fleet off the Treasure Coast, gave a
presentation on the Golden Age of Piracy.
TASTY MEMORIES
Across the street from the theater, the Summerlin
family was busily serving up its famous fish fry,
always a popular spot for lunch or dinner at any
festival. Last year, the family planned for 100 servings
of mahi-mahi, coleslaw, hush puppies and baked
beans but quickly ran out. Not taking any chances,
they planned for 125 servings this time, according to >>
Matthew Riley, left, and Jim O’Dell were among the many re-enactors from the
Civil and the Second Seminole wars who set up camp at the festival.
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