USA > Florida > Escambia County > Pensacola > Webb's Pensacola directory, 1887-88 > Part 1
Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org.
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10
Florida Railway and Navigation Co.
GAINESVILLE LEESBURG ORLANDO,
TAMPA,
ODALA, TAVARES, AND ALL SOUTH FLORIDA AND GULF PORTS. W lo ile ONUT ROUTE to OLENLASER MONTICELLO, MADISON,
AND THE FLORIDA HILL COUNTRY.
TERRENGT DAT COADE AND MEASLING CAR SEBYICE.
GENERAL OFFICESU JACKSONVILLE, FLA. Test DITRE MT, CORHED DY HOGAN STREET MCKEONVILLE, FLA
P. D. PAPY.
WEBB'S +PENSACOLA DIRECTORY 1887-8.
LIVENT.
BRIGHTEST. BEST. JACKSONVILLE MORNING NEWS. JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
JOHN P. VARNUM, EDIton NEWE PAINTING & PUBLISHING CO., PROPIRS.
DA& Morning Newspaper of the people, publishing the Despeines of Umed un Janing & supero cable news service from bumpe. Spudlad Dies reptopartire im New York, Washington and "St. Logui'in, and Bombal Canetpondenti in Europe Now You Tod the Codes and Towns of Florida
SIX DOLLARS A YEAR.
B9 CRNAFEST OF TRONIDA DAILIES.
THE KEY LINE
Unlocks the combination of Transportation in Florida. All Sections of the State Reached by this Great System.
Florida Railway and Navigation Co.
CLOSE THROUGH SCHEDULES DAILY BETWEEN
Pensacola, via de Funiak Springs, Tallahassee, Madison, Monticello, and Jacksonville ; Fernandina, Tavares, Orlando and Tampa; Fernandina, Cedar Key, Withlacoochee and Tampa ; Fernandina and Jacksonville.
PUNTA GORDA, the most Southern Railroad Point in Florida, is Reached by this Line and its Connections.
PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CARS
Through without change, between NEW ORLEANS & JACKSONVILLE, via De FUNIAK SPRINGS, TALLAHASSEE, MONTICELLO, MADISON and PENSACOLA.
SHORT LINE
via De Funiak Springs, Tallahassee, Monticello, Madison and Pensacola to Jacksonville, Fernandina, (the Newport of the South), Waldo, Gainesville, Cedar Key, Tampa, Orlando, Punta Rassa, Manatee, Key West, Havana, Nassau, West Indies, Hawthorne, Orange Lake, Ocala, Silver Spring, Lake View, Wildwood, Leesburg, Tavares, Lake Oclawaha, Lake Panasofkee, Fort Dade, The With- lacoochee, Brooksville, Sumterville, McClenny, Lake City, White Springs, Live Oak, Ellaville, The Suwanee, Wakulla Springs, etc., etc.
No line can offer greater facilities in the way of through accommodations, by day and night coaches. Through cars are run in connection with this system from all principal points North, East, West and Southwest. Rates as cheap as by any route. See that your tickets read via the FLORIDA RAILWAY & NAVIGATION CO.
GENERAL OFFICES, JACKSONVILLE, FLA.
H. R. DUVAL, Receiver. D. E. MAXWELL, General Supt.
A. O. MAC DONELL, Gen'l Passenger and Ticket Agent.
W. C. COLEMAN, Gen'l Trav. Agent, cor. Bay & Hogan Sts., Jacksonville, Fla.
" THE TOURIST ....
THROUGH CAR LINE
TO ALL
SOUTHERN CITIES, IS THE Louisville » Nashville R. R.
L. & N.
OFFERING A CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF
PULLMAN'S SUPERB BUFFET AND PALACE SLEEPING CARS.
FROM CINCINNATI, LOUISVILLE, EVANSVILLE, ST. LOUIS, and NASHVILLE, TO Montgomery, Mobile, New Orleans, Pensacola,
Tallahassee, De Funiak Springs, Jacksonville,
Ocala, Orlando, Tampa, Punta Gorda, Etc.
S. S. PARKER, DIVISION PASSENGER AGENT, CINCINNATI, O. J. W. MASS, DIVISION PASSENGER AGENT, ST. LOUIS, MO. . JNO. KILKENY, DIVISION PASSENGER AGENT, NEW ORLEANS, LA.
S. E. JONES, GENERAL EASTERN AGENT, NEW YORK CITY.
GEO. L. CROSS, NORTHWESTERN PASSENGER AGENT, CHICAGO, ILL. L. R. TUTTLE, PASSENGER AGENT, JACKSONVILLE, FLA.
C. P. ATMORE, GENERAL PASSENGER AGENT, LOUISVILLE, KY.
MUSCOGEE Lumber Company,
ESCAMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA.
The Most Complete Lumber Mills in this County-Loca- ted in the Finest and Most Picturesque Timber Belt-A Great and Valuable Business.
NE of the most important milling enterprises in the South is MUSCOGEE LUMBER COMPANY, located twenty miles by rail from Pensacola. This Company is now ten years most successfully in existence, and is situated on the Perdido River, which stream is the dividing line be- tween Florida and Alabama. The location is most favorable and advanta- geous, as well as picturesque. The Company has at present two large stearn saw mills in operation, having a capacity of turning out from eighty to ninety thousand feet of lumber a day ; and also a large planing mill, complete in every respect, in operation. The property of this Company is in a high, rolling country, from seventy to one hundred feet above the sea, a section known for the most health-giving atmosphere in the world to live in, the immense pine forests adding greatly to that. This section abounds also in several springs of transparent, cooling water, whose healing qualities are acknowleged by the most prominent physicians.
We do not say too much by stating that MUSCOGEE LUMBER COMPANY is unexcelled in its completeness. The Company has its own teams, machine shop, carpenter shops, stables and boarding houses, and the lands of the Com- pany consist of over a hundred thousand acres of forest lands. There are about eighty dwelling houses, which are inhabited by four hundred people. The large and well-stocked storehouses of the Company supply the hands with all the necessaries of life. The Company have recently added the electric light to their property, and now all their mills and lumber yards are lighted by electricity. In connection with their lumber and milling business, the Com- pany are buiding a new railroad to Mobile, which road will be, when finished, an air line to that city. This road runs through their mill property. The road is built twenty miles from Cantonment, towards Bay Minette, the track being as smooth as a table, thoroughly finished with fifty-pound rails, and equipped with cars for the hauling of logs.
The Company can supply by rail two hundred thousand feet of lumber a day alongside of vessels at the wharves drawing 22 feet of water.
There is a telegraph office connected with the Western Union offices, and telephone connecting the Company with their office in Pensacola.
THE OFFICERS OF THE COMPANY ARE
W. F. McCORMICK,
GEO. P. GATES, P. K. YONGE, President. General Manager. Secretary.
WEBB'S Pensacola Directory.
1887-88.
CONTAINING A GENERAL DIRECTORY OF THE CITIZENS, A BUSINESS DIRECTORY, A PARTNERSHIP DIRECTORY, A STREET DIRECTORY, A RECORD OF THE CITY GOVERNMENT, ITS INSTITUTIONS, SOCIETIES, CORPORATIONS, ETC., ETC., ETC.
No. 2. PRICE, $4.00.
" I cannot tell how. the truth may be ; I say the tale as 'twas said to me."-SCOTT.
FOR SALE BY
DOW & COE,
Booksellers and Stationers, 213 S. PALAFOX STREET, PENSACOLA, FLA.
NEW YORK : WANTON S. WEBB, COMPILER. 1887.
F. 2 P41 W . 1887-88
Entered according to an Act of Congress in the year 1887, by
in the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C.
Press of Haight & Dudley, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
CONTENTS.
PAGE.
Academies and Private Schools.
131
Banks
152
Benevolent Societies.
159
Bible Societies
156
Churches
153
Clubs
155
Convents
155
Courts
152
Escambia County Officers.
151
Fire Department
152
Hospitals.
156
Incorporated Companies
156
Marianna ...
163
Marianna Business Directory
165
Masonic
158
Military
154
Odd Fellows
158
Pensacola Business Directory .
131
Pensacola City Government.
152
Pensacola General Directory
33
Pensacola Street Directory.
31
Police Department
152
Post Office
155
Public Schools
154
Railroad Companies
158
Secret Societies
158
State Government. 151
Telegraph and Telephone Companies
156
United States Custom House
155
United States Internal Revenue
155
INDEX TO ADVERTISERS.
PAGE.
Advance-Gazette
164
Alderney Dairy
116
Andrew, George
Avery & Woolfolk 35
36
Barkley, W. B.
166
Bouvier, Edmond
40
Bozalino, E.
41
Brent, F. C. & Co.
42
Challen, James R.
162
Coker, J. P.
167
Collins, George W
49
D'Alemberte, J. E. & Co.
51
Davis, William P. 26
Davison & Lee. 53
Dow & Coe. 56
Dunn, E. T .. 57
Florida Forever. .inside front cover.
Florida Railroad & Navigation Co. inside front cover and outside.
Gardner & Fetzer.
165
Gonzalez, S. M ...
64
Gonzalez, Yniestra & Co. 63
Hargis, Robert W 67
Hillson, I. B.
70
Horsler, Henry & Co.
71
Hutchinson & Acosta.
72
Jacksonville Morning News . outside front cover:
Jacoby, Laz
74
Knowles Bros.
80
Kohler, J. W.
81
La Coste, C. H.
82
Leonard, S. S.
83
Lewis, W. F., Manager. 99
Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. front fly leaf.
McDavid, R. M ... 88
McMahon, C., Mrs. 85
Muscogee Lumber Co
opp title.
Norwich, Line.
.outside back cover.
1
Kellerman, W 79
25
WEBB'S PENSACOLA DIRECTORY.
Oerting, Mckenzie & Co.
95
Pensacola Advance-Gazette, The 164
Pensacola Daily Commercial, The.
161
Pensacolian, The.
130
Perry, David.
98
Pettersen & Eitzen
100
Pfeiffer, H. & Co.
101
Pfefferle, Theo.
102
Piaggio, Dario
103
Sexauer, Ed ..
110
Stearns, William H. & Son.
115
Stoddart, Alexander.
116
Taylor, William & Co.
118
Turton, George W.
120
Watson, Thomas C.
123
Webb's Florida
150
Wetumka City
.back fly leaf
Williams, F. M. 126
-
T. H . E
EGMONT HOTEL.
WM. P. DAVIS, Proprietor.
FERNANDINA, - - FLORIDA.
Elegantly furnished and equipped with all the modern improve- ments, inclusive of gas, steam heat, coal or wood fires, annunciators in sleeping-rooms, hot and cold water baths, etc., on every floor, telegraph and telephone connection with all points.
Billiards, Bowling and Lawn Tennis have been provided for the amusement of the guests.
HE PAVILION HOTEL.
WM. P. DAVIS, PROP.
GLOUCESTER, MASSACRUSETTS.
Situated on one of the finest Beaches on the New England Coast. Good Bathing, Boating, Fishing, Etc.
PENSACOLA.
This city is situated in the western part of the State, and in the southwestern part of Escambia County, of which it is the county seat, and on the north side of Pensacola Bay, within ten miles of the outer buoy in the waters of the Gulf of Mexico, which marks the entrance to the harbor. The channel at the entrance to the port haş the depth of twenty-five feet, and when the obstruc- tions now being removed are away, the channel will again have the depth that it had before the war, and ocean vessels can be brought alongside of and within ten feet of the cars, thus enabling this port to successfully compete with all others for both foreign and domestic trade.
Pensacola is 246 miles from New Orleans, 371 from Jacksonville, 203 from Tallahassee, the capital of the State, 420 from Savannah, Ga., 165 from Montgomery, Ala., 105 from Mobile, Ala., 653 from Louisville, Ky., 763 from Cincinnati, 740 from St. Louis, 970 from Chi- cago, 1222 from New York, 994 from Washington, D.C., and 1439 from Boston.
The city advanced in population from 1870 to 1880, 117 per cent., at least 90 per cent. of which oc- curred from '76 to '80. The directory for '85 contained 2,634 names, showing a population on April 1, 1885, of 10,536.
This issue contains 3,555 names, which gives the city a population of 14,220,-a gain of 3,684 in two years.
It is safe to say that the public schools of Pensacola rank with the best in the South. A new and spacious building has been recently opened, and the children of the first families, as well as of all classes of the white population, attend. It would be hard to find a city where more interest and pride is shown in the cause of education than in Pensacola.
28
WEBB'S PENSACOLA DIRECTORY.
Pensacola is one of the great fish markets of the coun- try, and supplies largely the west and northwest with this food commodity.
The Louisville and Nashville Railroad in Florida runs from Pensacola north to Flomaton, or Pensacola Junc- tion, 44 miles, where it connects for the North, East and West. The Pensacola and Atlantic Railroad which is owned by the above-named road runs from Pensacola east to River Junction near Chattahoochee, 161 miles, where it connects for the East and North via the Florida Railway and Navigation Co. and the Savannah, Florida and Western Railway.
The Pensacola and Perdido Railroad runs from Pensa- cola to Millview on Perdido Bay, ten miles, and is used largely in the transportation of lumber, although regu- lar passenger trains are run.
The Pensacola and Memphis Railroad is soon to be built, which will bring the West and Northwest and the great iron and coal fields of Alabama nearer to Pensa- cola. In the single item of lumber this city has a world- wide reputation, ships arriving here from all parts of the world in that trade.
The "Indian Summer" of the North closely resembles the winter climate in Pensacola; while in the summer the fame of its baths, boating, and fishing is rapidly in- creasing its popularity.
There is one daily, receiving the associated press dis- patches; a semi-weekly ; and two weekly newspapers.
The new Continental Hotel is the pride of the people. and does much in extending the reputation of Pensacola as a winter resort. The City Hotel, the National and the Merchants' Hotel have a good reputation with the traveling public. The City Hotel and the National Hotel are situated on East Government street, near the Opera House and the Banks. During the past two years Pensacola has awakened to her possibilities. Streets have been graded, sidewalks put down universally, trees planted, and a general move onward has been made. A. person who has visited all the prominent cities of the state says "Pensacola is the most attractive of them all." In a commercial sense it is certainly on the eve of a great expansion, and it would not be surprising to find here in 1890 no less than 25,000 people, and in the year 1900, double that number.
WEBB'S FLORIDA.
Historical, Industrial and Biographical
By WANTON S. WEBB.
Contains a general review of the State, a detailed account of each County, its boundary, water courses, railroads, to- pography, soil, productions, prices of lands, climate, health, natural fertilizers, fish, game, stock raising, lumber, natural springs ; how, when and where to settle; a description of each city, village and country post office in Florida, down to. 1885. The work is 8x12 inches in size, contains over two hundred large double column pages of solid printed matter, and over one hundred illustrations of Florida scenery, some full page, the whole printed on toned paper, with an elegant illustrated cover, designed by Brannan. The weight of the book is one and a half pounds, and it will be sent to any part of the world postpaid, on the receipt of ONE DOL- LAR, addressed
WEBB'S FLORIDA, JACKSONVILLE, FLA.
READ WHAT IS SAID ABOUT IT.
"Certainly the best work of its kind on Florida that I have ever seen .. "-H. B. PLANT, President Savannah, Florida, and Western Railway Co., Southern Express Company, and Charleston and Savannah Railway Co.
"It is, beyond any comparison, the most thorough, complete, and satisfactory pic- torial and descriptive work on Florida that has yet appeared."-The Florida Despatch.
"We conscientiously recommend it to our readers."-The Indian River Sun.
"Of all works on Florida it is the most excellent and the most accurate."-Ocala Banner ..
"Yesterday about midday, WEBB'S FLORIDA, mounted on about twenty drays, was 1 brought from the Fernandina Railway Depot."-Florida Journal.
" As a compendium, accurate, fresh, and complete, we know of nothing that compares with it."-Florida Baptist.
" Without a rival."-Tampa Guardian.
"Throughout the work is a triumph of typographical art."-Tropical Paradise.
"Altogether it is the most comprehensive book on Florida as yet published, and fine engravings make its pages the more attractive."-The Floridian.
" Notices the most insignificant places."-The Pensacolian.
EAGLE PRINTING HOUSE 12 LIBERTY STREET
Our facilities are Better than those of any other office on the Hudson River, and the best judges Day our work is not exceffed anywhere, while our prices are very foco.
HAIGHT & DUDLEY PRINTERS
POUGHKEEPSIE, NEW YORK
The Typographic Advertiser (Philadelphia) says:
no Printing Office in the fand turns out better woozk.
EIGHT STEAM PRESSES OVER 500 FONTS OF TYPE
WEBB'S
PENSACOLA STREET DIRECTORY.
1887.
To make possible the postal delivery service, soon to be inaugurated in Pensacola, it became necessary to number all the house's in the city limits, which was ac- complished by the City Engineer in February. Pensa- cola is numbered after the style generally known as "Philadelphia plan," allowing 100 numbers to a block. The streets are divided into East and West, and North and South ; Palafox being the division for East and West, and Garden for North and South. It has been thought best not to give the names of those streets which have an existence only on the map, and which have not even been graded. Following are the streets running East and West, with Palafox as the division : Belmont, Brainerd, Cervantes, Chase, De Soto, Gadsden, Garden, Gonzalez, Government, Gregory, Intendencia, Jackson, La Rua, Lloyd, Main, Romana. Strong, Wright, Zar- ragossa. Of this number, Belmont, La Rua, Jackson, Gadsden, Cervantes, Strong, De Soto, Gonzalez, Brainerd, and Lloyd, extend only to Eighth Avenue. The others run from A, easterly, to limits. Immediately north of Wright, beginning at Eighth Avenue and running east- erly to limits, the streets are numbered from 1 to 30.
Those streets running North and South, with Garden as the division, are : A, Alcaniz, Barcelona, Baylen, Cevallos, Coyle, De Villiers, Donelson, Florida Blanca, Palafox, Reus, Spring, Zarragossa, and Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth and so on to Twentieth Avenues.
32
WEBB'S PENSACOLA DIRECTORY.
The other streets not given above nor affected by the division are the following :
Adams, from Government at Seville Square southerly.
Aragon, from Cevallos at the Cemetery easterly to the water.
Barracks, from Church next E of Tarragona to the water. Bru, from Romana first E of Palafox to Garden.
Church, from Jefferson to Seville Square first S of Gov- ernment.
Commendencia, from Church first E of Jefferson south- erly to the water.
Cushman Alley, see De Reache.
Davis, from Wright next E of Alcaniz northerly.
De Leon, from Cevallos next S of Geogory E to the water.
De Reache (or Cushman Alley), from Government at Public Square to Intendencia.
De Soto, from Cevallos next S of Wright E to the water. Eighth Avenue, N from Wright and extension of Ce. vallos.
Guillemarde, from Wright next E Palafox N to limits. Hayne, from Wright next E Tarragona N to limits.
Jefferson, from Government first E of Palafox southerly to the water.
Luke's Alley, from Aragon next W Cevallos to Chase. Manresa, from Romana first E of Tarragona N to Garden. Oliva, extension of A from W end Wright southerly. Public Square, Palafox c Government.
Salamanca, from Cevallos next S Chase E to the water. Seventh Avenue, from Wright northerly to limits. Seville Square, Government c Alcaniz.
Sixth Avenue, from Wright next E Davis N to limits. Spring, from Alcaniz at the Cemetery E to Cevallos.
WEBB'S PENSACOLA DIRECTORY.
1887.
ABBREVIATIONS : Ab, above ; agt, agent ; av, avenue ; b, boards ; bel, below ; bet, between ; bldg, building ; * , colored ; c, corner ; com, con- mission ; do, ditto ; E, east ; ex, express ; Fla Blanca, Florida Blanca ; Gov, Government ; h, house ; I'dencia, Intendencia ; ins, insurance ; L. & N. R. R., Louisville and Nashville R. R. ; n, near ; N, north ; ne, northeast ; n w, northwest ; opp, opposite ; prop, proprietor ; P. & A .. R. R., Pensacola and Atlantic R. R .; r, rear ; R. R., railroad ; S, south ; s e, southeast ; sq, square; st, street ; s w, southwest ; T'gona, Tarragona ; W, west ; Z'gona, Zarragona ; Z'gossa, Zarragossa.
Aaron Edward, * laborer, b Government n De Villiers Aaron George, * laborer, h ft 11th av
Aaron James, laborer, h Government n De Villiers Aaron Robert Mrs., h 409 W Gregory Aaron Robert Rev., * h E end Chase
Abbecathre B., * drayman, h Wright n De Villiers Abercrombel James E., timber, h 200 W Jackson Aberhart James, * laborer, h 308 E Chase
Abraham Irene Miss, b 28 W Zarragossa
Ackerman Guy O., lumber inspector, h 304 E Gov Ackerman John M., manager Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co., 14} E Government, h 409 E Zarragossa Acosta Tracy, b 10th av n 14th
A
COSTA WALTER J. (Hutchinson & Acosta), furniture, wall paper, carpets, 115 S Palafox, h 10th av n 14th
Acree Lizzie Mrs., h Spring c Romana
Acres Nancy, * widow, h r 217 E Intendencia
Adams Dinah, * h Luke's al, n Aragon Adams Evalina, * h Davis n Belmont
Adams Gabriel, * laborer, h Salamanca c 9th av Adams Henry, * laborer, h Wright n Cevallos
Adams Henry H., * laborer, b Reus c Government
34
WEBB'S PENSACOLA DIRECTORY,
Adams Jacob, * laborer, h De Villiers n Belmont
Adams John, * laborer, h 422 N Reus
Adams Laura, * widow, h Aragon n 9th av
Adams Lewis,* laborer, h Cevallos n Intendencia
Adams Robert,* laborer, h Jackson n De Villiers
Adams Vina, * widow, h Aragon n Cevallos Ahrends Charles, h 32 E Romana
Aiken Isaac M., clerk, h 116 W Gregory
Albert Wallace, * laborer, h 7th av n Gonzalez
Alexander Adele Mrs., h 332 E Intendencia Alexander Harry,* fisherman, h Commendencia n Main Alexander James, * cook, h 8th av c La Rua Alexander Smith,* whitewasher, h De Soto c Davis
Alexander William, * laborer, h 418 E Chase
Alfred Albert D., carpenter, h 314 E Intendencia
Alfred Lewis B., carpenter, h 432 E Intendencia Allen Adele Mrs., b 243 Romana
Allen David,* janitor, h 518 W Gregory
Allen Harry, h Main n Baylen
Allen Howard, * laborer, h foot Commendencia Allen John, * h 7th av c Strong
Allen Leantha, * widow, h 510 N Hayne
Allen Stephen, clerk, b 24 E Romana
Allen Squire, * carpenter, h 613 W Gregory
Almquist William, laborer, b r Zarragossa n De Villiers Alston Rachel, * h 130 E Intendencia Ambrose Bush,* laborer, h W end Main
Anderson Alfred, laborer, h Government n DeVilliers Anderson Andrew* (Jackson & Anderson), h 22 S T'gona
Anderson Eli, * laborer, h 6th av n Belmont
Anderson Elizabeth, * h Zarragossa c Cevallos Anderson Frank, * laborer, h Aragon n Cevallos
Anderson James, * h Luke's al n Aragon
Anderson Louis A., bill poster, 211} S Palafox, h do
Anderson Louis J., b Merchants' Hotel
Anderson Marie, * h foot Commendencia Anderson Maxwell, laborer, h Government c Coyle
Anderson Richard,* laborer, h Aragon n 9th av
Anderson Sterling, * confectionery, 4 E Government, h do
Anderson Walker, b 417 N 9th av
Anderson Warren E., physician, 301 S Palafox, b Mer- chants' Hotel
A NDREW GEORGE, proprietor Delmonico restau- rant and tobacconist, 501 S Palafox c Main, h do Andrews "men ----- , carpenter, hat Perdido wharf
35
WEBB'S PENSACOLA DIRECTORY.
Andrews ,* laborer, h W end Zarragossa
Andrews David, * laborer. h Fla Blanca n Government Andrews Joseph N., general store, 128 S Tarragona, h 422 E Wright
Andrews Mack, * laborer, h 119 W Garden Antoine Sylvester,* laborer, h Main n Barcelona
Apley Louis C., liq. ret., W Main n Palafox, h 321 W Zarragossa
Apostole Constantine, confectioner, 14 E Gov, h do Arbonoa Eugene, saloon, Z' gossa n Commendencia, h do Arbonoa Joseph, clerk, b Zarragossa n Commendencia Armstead Daniel E., carp, h Government c De Villiers Armstead Peter, * laborer, h 9th av n Aragon Armsted Henry,* laborer, h Gadsden c 7th av Armstrong James F., stevedore, h foot De Villiers Armstrong Jordan, * laborer, h Gregory c 10th av Ashford Joseph,* laborer, h 509 E Romana Asbury William,* carpenter, h 200 E Chase Ashworth Margaret, * b Luke's al n Aragon Asklund John, laborer, b foot Adams
Athey Moses, driver, h Fla Blanca n Zarragossa
Augustine Adolphus, liquors, 503 S Palafox, h W Main n Palafox
Aul Henry, carpenter, b 257 E Intendencia Austin Edward, drayman, h 909 1st
A
VERY ALBERT L. (R. M. Avery & Co.), h 8 N Palafox
A
VERY (A. Minor) & WOOLFOLK (John W.), hardware, stoves, agricultural implements, cordage, paints, oils, etc., 123 to 127 S Palafox c Intendencia, hı 27 E Gregory (See adv p 36)
Avery George W. Mrs., grocer, Jackson c Davis, h do
ELMONICO ESTAURANT. 501 South Palafox Street, cor. Main, Pensacola, Fla.
GEORGE ANDREW, (A Native of Greece), Proprietor.
MEALS SERVED AT ALL HOURS IN THE VERY BEST STYLE.
CHOICE CIGARS AND TOBACCO.
36
WEBB'S PENSACOLA DIRECTORY.
Avery Hattie Miss, b Jackson c Davis Avery John C., lawyer, 218} S Palafox, h 18 E Garden Avery Owen M. Mrs., h 222 N Spring A Avery Philip,* fisherman, h W end Zarragossa VERY RICHARD M. & CO (Albert L. Avery), house furnishing goods, 29 S Palafox, h 8 N Pal- afox c Garden
RAARS HENRY, lumber and timber, Palafox wharf, h 114 W La Rua
B ASSEN JOHN B., Very Rev. Rector St. Michael's R. C. Church, h 2 S Chase Backus Gabriel,* drayman, h Zarragossa n Coyle
Backus William,* fisherman, h Zarragossa n Coyle
Badgett Edward, clerk, b Palafox wharf
Baker Delia Mrs., h 402 W Belmont
Baker John, laborer, h 409 W Government
Baldricks Samuel,* laborer, h W Intendencia Baldwin Cora, widow, h Intendencia n Coyle
Baldwin Eliza Miss, dressmaker, 15} S Palafox, b 227 E Intendencia
Ball George W., clothing, 309} S Barcelona, h do
Ball Wesley,* laborer, 319 S Palafox
Ballard Frank,* carpenter, br 11 W Garden Bamfeel Herman, laborer, h Main n Baylen Banks George, * laborer, h Coyle n Gregory Banks Thomas, * laborer, h La Rua n Alcaniz Banks Viola, * widow, h W of Lake Ruby Bankston William, carpenter, b 419 E Romana Barclay Benjamin, engineer, h 419 E Intendencia Bardwell Burke,* drayman, h 405 W Government Bardwell Eliza, * widow, b 405 W Government
A. MINER AVERY. JOHN W. WOOLFOLK.
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.