
Tampa learned early how to throw a party and chase the future at once. The first Gasparilla festival sailed into the bay in 1904, a civic carnival built around the legend of the pirate Jose Gaspar that still fills the streets every January. A decade later, on the first day of 1914, the aviator Tony Jannus flew the world's first scheduled commercial airline flight across the bay from St. Petersburg to Tampa — the beginning of an entire industry, launched over Tampa's water.
The hand-rolled cigar trade faded by the middle of the twentieth century as machines and changing tastes took over, and Ybor went quiet for a while. But the brick survived, and from the 1980s the district came back as a National Historic Landmark, its factories and social clubs reborn as a cultural quarter. Modern Tampa runs on a deepwater port, a working downtown and Riverwalk, and the long curve of Bayshore Boulevard along the bay — a Gulf Coast city still proud of the immigrants who built it.
Why People Visit Tampa
Tampa draws travelers who want real heritage with Gulf sunshine — the brick-and-cigar history of Ybor's Latin Quarter, the fairy-tale minarets of Plant's hotel, the bay and the Riverwalk, and a pirate festival unlike anywhere else. It is a city that wears its immigrant, working-waterfront story openly, an easy gateway to the Gulf beaches just across the bay.