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John C. Williams House

1891 establishments in FloridaHouses completed in 1891Houses in St. Petersburg, FloridaHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in FloridaNational Register of Historic Places in Pinellas County, Florida
Pinellas County, Florida geography stubsTampa Bay Area Registered Historic Place stubs
St. Pete Williams House01
St. Pete Williams House01

The John C. Williams House (also known as the Manhattan Hotel or Williams Mansion) is a historic home in St. Petersburg, Florida. Originally located at 444 5th Avenue South, it was subsequently purchased by the University of South Florida and moved to 511 Second Street South, on the Bayboro campus. On April 24, 1975, it was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places. This house was built in 1891 and is Queen Ann architecture. Today it serves as the University of South Florida St. Petersburg Developmental Offices.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article John C. Williams House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

John C. Williams House
2nd Street South, Saint Petersburg

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Latitude Longitude
N 27.769211111111 ° E -82.635533333333 °
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The UPS Store

2nd Street South 200
33701 Saint Petersburg
Florida, United States
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St. Pete Williams House01
St. Pete Williams House01
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Al Lang Stadium
Al Lang Stadium

Al Lang Stadium is a 7,500-seat sports stadium along the waterfront of downtown St. Petersburg, Florida, United States which was used almost exclusively as a baseball park for over 60 years. Since 2011, it has been the home pitch of the Tampa Bay Rowdies of the USL Championship soccer league. Al Lang Stadium was built in 1947 at the site of an older facility known as St. Petersburg Athletic Park. It is named in honor of Al Lang, a former mayor of St. Petersburg who was instrumental in bringing minor league and spring training baseball to the city in the early 20th century. Al Lang Stadium was the spring training home of the St. Louis Cardinals of Major League Baseball from 1948 until 1997, with other teams occasionally sharing use of the facility for a few seasons at a time. During the summer, the ballpark was the home field for the Cardinal's minor league franchise in the Florida State League. The Cardinals moved out in 1998, when St. Petersburg gained their own MLB team and the Tampa Bay Devil Rays used Al Lang Stadium as their first spring training venue and minor league ballpark. The Rays constructed a new training facility in Charlotte County a few years later, and Al Lang Stadium hosted its last spring training game in March 2008. The stadium was the site of exhibition and amateur baseball for the next few years until the Tampa Bay Rowdies moved to St. Petersburg from Tampa in 2011. It was incrementally modified into a soccer venue over each of the following off-seasons until October 2014, when the club and the city signed an agreement giving the team more control of the facility, and more extensive renovations were undertaken to expand seating on both sides of the pitch and improve the fan experience. Though former Rowdies' majority owner Bill Edwards proposed expanding the stadium's capacity to 18,000 seats as part of a bid to move the club into Major League Soccer (MLS), the plans were not realized. In 2018, Edwards sold the club to the Tampa Bay Rays ownership group in a deal which also transferred control of Al Lang Stadium.