
St. Petersburg is young as cities go. The Pinellas peninsula between Tampa Bay and the Gulf had been fishing ground for the Tocobaga people long before Europeans came, and a few pioneer families raised citrus along the shore in the mid-1800s. The town itself arrived with the railroad: in 1888 Peter Demens’s Orange Belt Railway reached the end of the peninsula, and a settlement grew up around the terminus. It incorporated as a town in 1892 and as a city in 1903 — a small, sun-struck place almost surrounded by water, looking for a reason to be found.
Our St. Petersburg logo carries the Florida alligator over “Florida Territory · Est. 1845,” the year Florida became a state — the shared emblem of every Merlin Classics Florida town. Printed in clean retro black-and-white that reads like an old crate stamp or travel decal, the alligator stands for Florida as a whole; what makes this one St. Petersburg is everything behind it — the sunshine and the bay, the green benches and the murals, and the New Year’s morning the airline age took off from the waterfront.
Why People Visit St Petersburg
St. Petersburg mixes sunshine, shoreline, and a genuine arts scene in a way few Florida cities can. Visitors come for the waterfront museums and murals, the pier and the bayfront parks, the nearby Gulf beaches, and the easy, bright pace of a city that has earned its Sunshine City name for more than a century. History sits comfortably beside everyday life here, from the spot where the first airline took flight to the gardens and galleries downtown, and the water is never more than a few blocks away.