The architectural works of Joseph H. Blodgett

An early 20th century recently completed house by Joseph H. Blodgett. | University of North Florida

Durkeeville is home to the largest collection of surviving structures designed and built by noted African American architect Joseph Haygood Blodgett. Born into slavery in Augusta, Georgia, Blodgett moved to Jacksonville during the 1890s with one paper dollar and one thin dime to his name. Initially working for the railroad for a dollar a day, Blodgett went on to start a drayage business, a woodyard, a farm and a restaurant before becoming a building contractor around 1898. The Great Fire of 1901 changed the fortunes of Blodgett.

Following the Great Fire of 1901, Blodgett not only designed and built 258 houses, he kept 199 to rent, eventually becoming one of the city’s first Black millionaires. Blodgett’s design trademark was the inclusion of a small upper porch above a large lower porch that often extended around the side of a house. While the majority of Blodgett’s structures have been razed, homes designed and built by the early Black architect can be found throughout the Durkeeville neighborhood.

The Durkee Gardens National Register Historic District

A view of Durkee Gardens from West 8th Street during the late 1930s. | City of Jacksonville

Generally bounded by Myrtle Avenue, McConihe Street, Payne Avenue and 13th Street, the Durkee Gardens Historic District encompasses 49 acres and includes 209 contributing buildings completed between 1934 and 1969. Platted between 1934 and 1944, the district is dominated by the Minimal Traditional architectural style and a lasting reminder of the quality work of African-American architects and builders such as James Edwards Hutchins and Sanford Augustus Brookings.

Florida’s second oldest public housing development

A 1938 photograph of the Durkeeville Public Housing Project. | City of Jacksonville

In 1937, the Public Works Administration completed the 215-unit Durkeeville public housing development just south of West 8th Street. It was the second public housing project built in Florida under the federal Public Works Administration. At the time, the development was intended to provide housing for Jacksonville’s Black middle class during the Great Depression. The old Durkeeville projects were replaced by The Oaks at Durkeeville in 1999, as Florida’s first redevelopment under the HOPE VI program. The development, in the heart of Durkeeville, consists of 164 apartments, 28 market-rate single family homes, and a 36-unit senior living facility featuring retail space along Myrtle Avenue.

A Green Book site on Kings Road

A 1968 postcard of the Fiesta Motel. | Library of Congress

The Fiesta Motel provided lodging for African American travelers when it opened in 1961. Featuring 26 air conditioned rooms, each with television and telephone, the Fiesta Motel was also a Negro Motorist Green Book site. First published in 1936 by Victor Green, the Green Book was the bible of African American travel during segregation. For years, outside of the Black community, little was known about the Green Book, which was a compilation of accommodations, gas stations, restaurants and other businesses for people of color attempting to travel free of racial humiliation, discrimination and violence. Located at 1251 Kings Road, the old motel is now the Kings Courtyard Apartments.

Jacksonville’s first baseball epicenter

A photograph of Durkee Field along Myrtle Avenue in 1937. | Ritz Theatre & Museum

Long before 121 Financial Ballpark and the Jumbo Shrimp, Durkee Field was the epicenter of Jacksonville’s professional baseball community. Amazingly, it’s still standing today. Dating back to 1912, this ballpark once served as the home of the Negro League’s Jacksonville Red Caps. Some of the first teams to play here include the Jacksonville Tars and the Jacksonville Athletics, a team on which James Weldon Johnson was a member of. Baseball legends who played here over the years include Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, and Henry Aaron. Aaron also lived in Durkeeville during his brief stay in Jacksonville. In 1980, it was renovated and renamed for James P. Small, who served as Stanton High School’s coach, band director and athletic director from 1934 to 1969. In 2013, the ballpark was added to the National Register of Historic Places under the name Joseph E. Durkee Athletic Field.