The area now comprising
the Morninside Historic District has a history as sold as the
City of Miami itself. Today's
Morningside occupies land at the southern boundary of Lemon City,
a pioneering community once larger than the neighboring
city of Miami. Natural channels in Biscayne Bay provided access
through shallow bay waters to a bight in the shoreline at
what is now N.E. 61st Street. Then called Lemon Avenue, the main
street of Lemon City grew up around the dock located at this street's
terminus at the bay.
In 1922, a mostly undeveloped bayfront tract
just to the south of Lemon Avenue and north of then Miami city
limits, was
platted . Bounded on the west by the railroad tracks, the south
by present-day N.E. 59th Street and on the north by present-day
N.E. 60th Street, this area, called Bay Shore, was subdivided
by the Bay Shore Investment Company. These few blocks constituted
the first of three phases that would be developed by the company
between 1922 and 1924. By 1925, Bay Shore's
limits had been extended southward to present-day N.E. 55th Terrace.
That year also saw the area of Bay Shore, as well as Lemon City,
annexed into the City of Miami.
James H. Nunnally, president of the Bay Shore
Investment Company, envisioned Bay Shore as an exclusive residential
community, planned for every modern convenience. In designing
Bay Shore, the architects and landscape designers adapted
the best of the "garden city" movement of England, as
well as contemporary suburban planning concepts, to this bayfront
location.
Before the first lots were offered for sale,
the subdivision was fully developed. Streets, which bore names
like Toxaway,
Hibiscus, Cocoanut, and Poinsettia were paved and curbed, parkways
were curbed and planted with foliage, street lighting
was laid in underground conduits, and fresh water was distributed
in underground pipes from Bay Shore's own water pumping
station. At a time when many lots in other Miami subdivisions
were being sold undeveloped and unimproved, Bay Shore was
notable for its carefully conceived and executed plan of development.
The character of the area was also guaranteed
by the deed restrictions that the developers attached to the sale
of each lot.
These restrictions specified the minimum construction cost of
each house, ranging from a low of seven thousand dollars for
inland lots to thirteen thousand dollars for lots abutting the
bay. Only single family houses were allowed - duplexes,
apartments, and hotels were strictly prohibited. Construction
materials were regulated so that no house could be constructed
solely of wood. Building set backs and lot frontage were controlled
and the developer required that all building plans be submitted
to the company for approval prior to construction.
Although Bay Shore developed steadily during
the boom years of the 1920's and even during the Great Depression,
the area
experienced its greatest building expansion between 1936 and 1942,
with many of the district's finest houses built during this
period. In 1936, the neighborhood was enlarged; the blocks along
present-day N.E. 55th Street and the south side of N.E. 55th
Terrace were subdivided as Bay Shore Plaza by the company of Islands,
Incorporated. Deed restrictions similar to those of
Bay Shore guaranteed a continuity in architectural development.
Following the United States entry into World War II,
construction in the district, and the city as a whole, virtually
stopped. Building resumed after the War, with approximately one
third of the district's homes built since 1946.
The expansion of Biscayne Boulevard in the 1940's
and 1950's divide the original Bay Shore tract, separating the
area to the
west from that lying between the Boulevard and the Bay. During
this time the name Bay Shore faded from popular usage and
the eastern portion of Bay Shore became known as Morningside.
In the ensuing years, Biscayne Boulevard separated
and buffered Morningside from areas to its west. As surrounding
areas
suffered economic decline, Morningside survived as a multi-ethnic,
multi-racial, middle class community.
Morningside remains today one of Miami's most
intact historic neighborhoods. Realizing its historic and unique
character,
residents petitioned the City of Miami for recognition as an historic
district in the early 1980's. Many hours of hard work in
documenting the area's historic structures paid off, as in 1984,
Morningside was designated as the City of Miami's first
historic district. The Morningside Historic District is comprised
of the houses located in the portion of Morningside from
N.E. 55th Street to N.E. 60th Street, between Biscayne Boulevard
and the Bay.
Work continues in the preservation and recognition
of Morningside with the nomination and anticipated placement of
the
Morningside Historic District on the National Register of Historic
Places in 1992.
*The Historic Houses of Morningside - The
Morningside Preservation Society
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