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December, 2017 The Antique Shoppe Page 17
Florida’s Forgotten Roadway...
The Woodpecker Route
A Journey From Macclenny to St. Petersburg
by Richard Stanley Farneski
America’s love affair with traveling began in 1913 when Henry pastures. Travelers would enjoy a peaceful journey all the way
Ford revolutionized the automobile manufacturing process with the from Gainesville down to Saint Petersburg. Much of the single lane
assembly line. Ford’s ability to turn out more automobiles, enabled highway was asphalt paved, with some sections poured in concrete.
more American’s to travel. Northern visitors were entering a whole new world with their visit
Since then, individuals and families have taken to the road to visit to the Sunshine State. Warm weather, orange groves, the Tarpon
and explore the United States. This new-found accessibility to other Spring Sponge Docks and the Gulf of Mexico’s warm waters were
parts of the country prompted many to head South to Florida. alluring and tempted many not to return home.
With the increase in automobiles traversing the landscape, it The artistic and colorful official logo sign of the Woodpecker
would be years Route is popular with art collectors, antique
before highways aficionados, interior decorators and those
and byways would interested in birds. Retracing the original
see a significant Woodpecker Route in Florida will take you back to
upgrades and a simpler time in Florida history.
expansion. With Once they passed through the towns, travelers
travelers heading were treated to many roadside billboards and
South from the roadway signs. There wasn’t much in terms
Northeast and of regulations and standards when it came to
New England, roadway signs in the first 30 years of the 20th
they would find century. Most communities named their in-town
themselves upon streets, but once outside the city limits, road
a unique roadway, signs were lacking with beneficial information.
the Woodpecker Back then, numbered routes and posted speed
Route. limits were unheard of. Drivers were expected
The Woodpecker to travel with common sense and usually asked
Route is one of the for directions, as road maps weren’t readily
oldest motoring accessible.
routes in the With more automobiles taking to the roads and
country. It funneled traveling farther, communities
travelers into South Carolina then onto Florida, created their own road signs to
beginning just after the end of World War I in 1919. inform travelers and slow their
In 1922, as automobile travel flourished, the speed. This was evident at railroad
Automobile Legal Association’s Automobile Green crossings, intersections and curves.
Book listed the woodpecker Route as a viable way Not only did communities place
to Florida. The 1922 publication described the their own signs, commercial
route as being from “Augusta, Georgia to Lake City roadway advertising came into
and Jacksonville, Florida.” prominence.
The route was just that, the Woodpecker Route. Goodyear Tires, Standard Oil
It didn’t have a number assigned to it. The route and local businesses often placed
started in Greenville South Carolina and ended signs with their logo along side
in Saint Petersburg, Florida. For residents of New directional information and safety
England and the Northeast, the Woodpecker Route messages.
was the “Gateway to Florida.” Continued on Page 29
Instead of bypassing Southern towns, as the
Interstate system does today, the Woodpecker Route went right
through the heart of them. It allowed travelers to come into contact
with the Southern lifestyle and Americana. No 24-hour rest stops or
fast food restaurants, just real towns and real people.
What Woodpecker Route travelers found were quaint Mom & Pop
motels, home cooked meal restaurants and filling stations with the
attendant sitting out front. Many remnants remain of a bygone era.
Old style gas pumps, showing their faded legendary oil company
logos, and abandoned restaurants and motels dot the Woodpecker
Route. Why the name, the Woodpecker Route? Woodpeckers were in
abundance along the entire route.
The Woodpecker Route, State Highway 121, in Florida went
through Macclenny, Lake Butler, Worthington Springs, La Crosse,
Gainesville, Williston, Lebanon Station, Crystal River, Tarpon
Springs, Clearwater and St. Petersburg. Prior to 1960, the majority
of the Woodpecker Route in Florida, aside from the small towns
was pine forests, churches, orange groves, cemeteries and grazing