LEADER 04100nas 2200457- 450 001 9910850873403321 005 20230106213018.0 035 $a(OCoLC)1264229708 035 $a(CKB)5450000000771557 035 $a(CONSER)--2022270647 035 $a(EXLCZ)995450000000771557 100 $a20210818b191u19uu k-- a 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurbn||||ma|mp 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 14$aThe evening leader 210 1$aTarpon Springs, Florida :$cThe Leader Publishing Company 215 $a1 online resource 300 $aH.W. Morford, editor. 311 $a2832-2258 330 $aThe Evening Leader (sn96027122) began publication in the early 1900s in Tarpon Springs, FL under the guidance of H.W. Morford, who served as manager and editor, and E.T. Byington, the associate editor. The four-page paper was printed daily (except Sundays) and published every afternoon, not evening, as its name would suggest. The Leader informed its readers of international events such as World War I, the US occupation of Veracruz during the Mexican Revolution, and the 1918 pandemic. The paper reported on major national events, with coverage often appearing on the front page of every issue. The election leading to Woodrow Wilson's second presidency, the operation of the Panama Canal, and the development of the Federal Trade Commission were just some of the events featured in its earlier publication years.- 330 $9^^$aAlthough the Leader featured national and global news, it primarily reported on happenings from Tarpon Springs and neighboring towns, offering readers coverage of local politics and government. Social and personal news sections appeared regularly, providing a glimpse of local life with notes on social gatherings and hotel arrivals. Sporting events, both local and national, are highlighted frequently. The Leader also featured advertisements for various goods, including but not limited to lumber, banking, and sponges. Tarpon Springs is a city on Florida's Gulf coast that traces its origins to pioneer settlements in the 1870s. Rumors say it acquired its name after fish (tarpon) were spotted "springing" from the bayou. The first incorporated city in what would later become Pinellas County, Tarpon Springs was incorporated in 1887. The city became home to Greek immigrants in the 1880s. Today, Tarpon Springs is home to the largest Greek community in the United States. In 1905, J.K.- 330 $9^^$aCheyney, a local businessman, partnered with John Cocoris, a businessman of Greek descent from New York City, to recruit 500 men from the Dodecanese region of the Greek islands as sponge divers. Unlike in Key West, where local spongers used long poles to harvest sponge, the Greeks employed diving techniques in Tarpon Springs. The difference in approach proved fruitful and allowed Tarpon Springs to flourish and become the "sponge capital of the world." Within a few years, Tarpon Springs welcomed new Greek residents who changed the city's culture. These newcomers opened Greek restaurants, bakeries, and grocery stores that flourished and provided a semblance of the motherland. By 1907, the first Greek church in the city, the St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church, was founded. A celebration is held annually on the sixth of January for Epiphany (known initially as Greek Cross Day).- 330 $9^^$aThis city-wide celebration is quite the attraction, drawing visitors from all over who travel to join in on the festivities. 517 1 $aLeader 606 $aGreek Americans$2fast$3(OCoLC)fst00947109 606 $aSponge trade$2fast$3(OCoLC)fst01985247 607 $aTarpon Springs (Fla.)$vNewspapers 607 $aPinellas County (Fla.)$vNewspapers 607 $aFlorida$zPinellas County$2fast 607 $aFlorida$zTarpon Springs$2fast 608 $aNewspapers.$2fast 615 7$aGreek Americans 615 7$aSponge trade 676 $a071.3 906 $aJOURNAL 912 $a9910850873403321 996 $aThe evening leader$94157413 997 $aUNINA