The Florida Peninsular was an early Florida newspaper in Tampa. It was established in 1853 by P. G. Wall and published by William J. Spencer. In 1873 it was reported to have 400 subscribers.[1] Simon Turman, Jr. was an editor during the antebellum period,[2] then Alfonso Delaunay, a postmaster, took over. Delaunay was pro-slavery[3] and applauded extrajudicial justice in Tampa.[4] Turman returned as editor after its publisher ousted Delaunay, who started his own paper.

Issues from 1855 until 1871 have been archived at the University of Florida library.[5]

Simon Turman

Simon B. Turman Jr. (1829 May 22, 1864) was an early resident of Tampa, Florida. Turman's father, Simon B. Turman, Sr., was from Ohio and a pioneer in Palmetto, Florida.[6]

Simon, Jr., came from Indiana to Florida in 1843, and to Tampa in 1845.[7] His married Meroba Hooker in 1847. She helped maintain Oaklawn Cemetery.[8] They had one son, named for his brother, Solon B. Turman's sister Mary married John A. Henderson.

Simon, Jr., served as a probate judge and newspaper editor at the Florida Peninsular newspaper. On the eve of the Civil War, he attended the Florida Secession Convention as a representative of Hillsborough County along with James Gettis and signed the Ordinance of Secession. He was a casualty of the war, dying in Georgia.

References

  1. "Rowell's American Newspaper Directory". July 6, 1873 via Google Books.
  2. Bender, Shelby Jean Roberson; Dunham, Elizabeth Laramie (April 24, 2013). Tampa's Historic Cemeteries. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9780738598536 via Google Books.
  3. Tampa in Civil War and Reconstruction by Carter Brown Jr. Page 14
  4. Denham, James M. (April 24, 1997). A Rogue's Paradise: Crime and Punishment in Antebellum Florida, 1821-1861. University of Alabama Press. ISBN 9780817308476 via Google Books.
  5. "The Florida peninsular". ufdc.ufl.edu.
  6. "palmetto.htm". floridahistory.org.
  7. Hazen, Pauline Brown (1914). The Blue Book and History of Pioneers, Tampa Florida (PDF). p. 30.
  8. "Meroba Hooker Crane « Tampa Riverwalk".
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