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Stewart Beach: Eight Decades of Family Fun and Transformation

July 12, 2024 Galveston Unscripted | J.R. Shaw
Stewart Beach: Eight Decades of Family Fun and Transformation
Galveston Unscripted | VisitGalveston.com
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Galveston Unscripted | VisitGalveston.com
Stewart Beach: Eight Decades of Family Fun and Transformation
Jul 12, 2024
Galveston Unscripted | J.R. Shaw

From its conception by Mayor Brantley Harris, inspired by the grand beaches of the Atlantic Coast, to its development with the help of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Works Progress Administration, Stewart Beach has experienced pivotal moments that shaped it into an iconic park. Overcoming racial segregation in the 1960s and implementing family-friendly policies in the 1980s, Stewart Beach evolved into a premier destination with attractions like roller skating rinks, dance floors, and beach volleyball courts. Despite changing recreational trends, it remains a cherished spot with essential amenities and a rich history, making it a point of pride for the Galveston community.

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Show Notes Transcript

From its conception by Mayor Brantley Harris, inspired by the grand beaches of the Atlantic Coast, to its development with the help of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Works Progress Administration, Stewart Beach has experienced pivotal moments that shaped it into an iconic park. Overcoming racial segregation in the 1960s and implementing family-friendly policies in the 1980s, Stewart Beach evolved into a premier destination with attractions like roller skating rinks, dance floors, and beach volleyball courts. Despite changing recreational trends, it remains a cherished spot with essential amenities and a rich history, making it a point of pride for the Galveston community.

Galveston Unscripted

What is Galveston Unscripted?

Follow Galveston Unscripted on Spotify or Apple Podcasts! More history content on Visit Galveston!

Speaker 1:

Stewart Beach has been a cherished family destination for over 80 years, blending rich history with recreation.

Speaker 1:

Conceived by Mayor Brantley Harris in the late 1930s and developed with community support and labor from President Franklin D Roosevelt's Work Progress Administration, or WPA, it quickly became a beloved spot. Families have enjoyed its evolving amenities and family-friendly atmosphere, making it a premier beach destination on the Gulf Coast. Like most places in Galveston, stewart Beach has a rich history. In the late 1930s, mayor Brantley Harris, inspired by large public beaches on the Atlantic Coast like Jones Beach in New York, envisioned Galveston attracting tourists and becoming the Riviera on the Gulf, a title that would signify Galveston as a premier beach destination on the Gulf Coast. In the 20th century, the city commission called an election to authorize the issuance of $175,000 in revenue bonds and Robert Cummins, a Houston engineer and architect, drew up the plans to develop the beach. Donald Boyce, who had been the assistant manager of Jones Beach, was brought in to supervise the construction and to manage the park. The labor used to build and develop Stewart Beach Park came from President Franklin D Roosevelt's Works Progress Administration, or WPA. The Works Progress Administration was created in 1935, under President FDR's New Deal. It was a work program to employ millions affected by the Great Depression. The WPA aimed to offer valuable work, preserve skills and self-respect, and stimulate the economy, offering wages from $15 to $90 per month. Stewart Beach was named as a tribute to Mako Stewart Sr, a Galveston resident and founder of Stewart Title Company, one of the oldest and largest title companies in the United States. The Stewart Beach name dedication was made possible by the support of his son, mako Stewart Jr, and other community leaders in Galveston.

Speaker 1:

Stewart Beach was formally dedicated as a beach park on July 18, 1941, just over eight decades ago, and since 1941, stewart Beach has been through many changes. Mayor Harris dedicated and christened Stewart Beach with his daughter Margaret, who broke a bottle of water on the SS Stewart Beach just like you would christen a ship. The SS Stewart Beach was a small pavilion on the beach at that time. It was built with a boardwalk, concession stand, restrooms, dance floor and even a small roller skating rink. There was also a beach service office for renting umbrellas and chairs to the beachgoers.

Speaker 1:

Stewart Beach has pretty much always had a pavilion and recreational activities for beachgoers a snack bar to buy food and drinks and even offer showers after a day in the sand. However, for the first two decades of Stewart Beach's existence, the beach was for whites. Only by the early 1960s Galveston's racial barriers had begun to crumble After a sit-in of 25 black students at one of Stewart Beach's snack bars, resulting in police intervention. Conversations between Stewart Beach managers began to lean heavily towards full integration of the beach and by 1962, stewart Beach and the Stewart Beach Pavilion was open to all.

Speaker 1:

Over the past eight decades, stewart Beach has hosted numerous attractions and events, including a shooting range, skating rink, music and dancing, and even radio stations hosting events at Stewart Beach. In the 1980s, the Galveston Park Board banned alcohol and glass to enhance its family-friendly appeal, which remains a key feature today. Despite changes to its entertainment preferences, stewart Beach still offers amenities like restrooms, showers, chair and umbrella rentals, beach volleyball courts and a playground, and it remains one of Texas' premier family beaches and a point of historic pride for the Galveston community. Stewart Beach continues to be a cherished family destination, with a range of amenities and supervision by highly trained lifeguards, the Galveston Island Beach Patrol. Despite evolving recreational trends, its historical significance and family-friendly nature ensures it remains a favorite for locals and tourists alike.