Showing posts with label Little White House. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Little White House. Show all posts

Saturday, September 28, 2019

Truman Annex

I found myself waiting to go to a movie at the Tropic Cinema just around the corner so I wandered through Truman Annex with my camera. I haven't been here ina  while and the whole place looks pretty much the same...
I'm not a fan of gated communities but who cares what I like. I wouldn't live in Truman Annex even if I could easily afford to, but lots of people like the idea of living in Key West but without the mess and color and vibrancy of a noisy populated Old Town.
The developer of this property created a style of housing that is now known as "the Key West style." It's a style reminiscent of Old Town Conch cottages but all gussied up. It's very effective  and seems to sell well, and not just here.
This used to be the Navy Base in Key West but when the land was put up for sale a young man who first came to Key West as a youthful homeless urchin sleeping in doorways as the legend has it put in a bid. He had to have a second go as the first bid bankrupted him but he got it done and is now one of those few families that have made millions off Key West.  
I like the doggie bags as outside dogs are NOT allowed in Truman Annex. Rusty has never stepped in here.
However even here loose chickens have made their way...seen in the distance...actual wildlife! 
Through all the gates there is tidal water at the Margaritaville Resort Docks:


Then there is the major tourist attraction which is  the  Little White House where President Truman liked to spend time during his presidency. It was more as a working vacation than an actual period of time off though he did walk around town and fish and do that sort of stuff.


In the Key West  style:

Try and figure how to locate this street address:

Navy officer housing converted into splendid apartments at splendid prices:
Meanwhile around the corner the masses line up for the ferry to Sunset Key and Latitudes restaurant for lunch:
A Portuguese cruise ship. Never seen one of those before in the Southernmost City.
I used to work in that corner of the marina prepping Stiletto catamarans to take tourists sailing round the harbor. After I got my job at the police department I allowed my Master's 50 ton license to elapse. I'm not real keen to go sailing for money again though it was okay while it lasted.

Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Truman Annex

Truman Annex used to stick out a lot more in Key West when there seemed (to me) to be more of a split between the colorful eccentric city and the restrained segregated annex hidden behind its gates and fences. These days to someone of my jaundiced eye the entire city sometimes feels like an annex, occupied part time by people whose claim to eccentricity is having bought a property for far too much money.
Looking through the Presidential Gates, so called rather grandiloquently because they are supposed to only open for a President, we can see Caroline Street leading toward Duval. Not a clean tidy street to be sure but not exactly run down.
Truman Annex was the brainchild of a young Pritam Singh, the developer who came to Key West penniless and slept rough and who made a fortune through Truman Annex despite the fact his first bid for the former Navy property sent him bankrupt.
It is one of those Key West legends in the style of "today's the day" the battle cry of the man who found the treasure- Mel Fisher.
Singh created the "key West style" for him homes which can be seen here and at the golf course and at Tranquility Bay in Marathon.
White picket fences, balconies, lots of greenery and white paint. It is the style of Old Town rendered clean and modern and easy to live in with modern conveniences.
Because this used to be a Navy Base it was a good place for vacationing Presidents to stay and be secure. President Truman stayed as much as he could and when he was in town her lived the Navy Commandant's House which became known as "The Little White House."
It remains a visitor attraction in the Annex surrounded by all the carefully groomed homes in this enclave.
I saw these style of buildings at the Panama Canal  which was built in the same era in a similar climate. Nowadays these are sales and rental offices for the realtors on the property:



The streets inside the annex are additions to the streets outside the fences:


I can see the desire of some people to stay here free of chickens and parking problems, no bums and peace and quiet.
Now that the rest of the city seems less raucous the annex in turn seems less exclusive in some way.
The crowds on Duval Street seem to be rolling up the carpet earlier in the city than in decades past.
The working class are being pushed out and artists need to make a lot of money to live here anymore.

All of Old Town Key West seems to be gentrifying, catching up the annex as it were...
And outside the fences I took a picture of the US Custom House, a tourist attraction with a museum well worth the visit.
Right in the path of the cruise ship hordes.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Truman's Little White House

The building known today as the Little White House inside Truman Annex was built in 1890 to house the Navy base Commandant and his Paymaster. It gained fame as the southern retreat of President Harry Truman when he spent a large amount of time in Key West vacationing. They say he took 11 vacations here totaling 175 days during his presidency after World War Two. There are lots of pictures floating around Key West about Truman's life while vacationing. It is said he met his Vice President-Elect Alben Barkley in Key West at the airport dressed in his "Key West Uniform" of brightly colored open neck shirts and the VP was rather taken aback standing there in his Washington DC uniform of wool suit and starched collar.Apparently life in Key West was quite laid back for the president who walked around town accompanied only by a secret service agent while he got his daily exercise- unthinkable these days. Key West liked Harry Truman enough, and appreciated his visits so much that they renamed Division Street (which divided the city from the open country at that distant time) in his honor.I arrived too late to get in the house this time but I did get to see the Truman sculpture by sandisle.com a sculpture medium that I find fascinating and quite arresting.Of course I couldn't pass by this lovely old house without turning scatological for just one minute. Really? The restroom sign right at the entrance as you walk in. Too cool. The Little White House has an excellent site to give this old Key West home a proper perspective:

http://www.trumanlittlewhitehouse.com/