Post 13 Tallahassee, Florida

Post 13

Tallahassee, Florida

Post 13 Tallahassee, Florida

About This Post

Post Namesake
Sauls-Bridges
What Makes this Post Unique
The Claude Sauls American Legion Post 13 in Tallahassee, Florida, was chartered by The American Legion on June 9, 1919. The charter, granted on the recommendation of the State Organization, was signed by the following people: State Chairman, Albert H. Blanding State Secretary, Sumter L. Lowry, Jr. Chairman of the National Executive Committee, Henry D. Lindley Secretary of the National Executive Committee, Eric Fisher Wood Post 13 Charter Members: T. R. Hodges, W. E. Grissett, M. M. Reedy, George K. Walker, W. B. Hopkins, L. D. Hartsfield, C. A. Brautlesht, R. R. McKennion, C. D. Burr, B. A. Luning, M. W. Green, O. G. Kendrik, L. D. Fain, L. M. Lively, B. W. Brown, W. P. Bevis, A. H. Iseley, L. T. Stack, F. A. Wahnish, B. Greenberg, Terrell H. Yon, Harry Woodson, Louise Roberts Bevis, R. A. Gray Russell T Mickler, Frederick E. Moor, Fred H. Davis, W. B. Myers, P. A. Appleyard, Thomas King, Julius McGowan, James C. Yeargin, Albert W. Boatwright, Joseph L. Bryan, Horace D. Van Grust, W. K. Collins, W. Munro McIntosh. Captain R. A. Gray was the first commander of the Post. This Post was initially designated the Claude Sauls American Legion Post after Tallahassee citizen Claude L. Sauls who was the first Tallahassee resident to be killed in World War I. Articles of Incorporation, signed by Judge E. C. Love on December 11, 1924, which listed at the time of signing the individuals as the current members of Post 13. Many of the names listed familiar throughout the 20th Century history of Tallahassee. Buildings, parks and streets throughout Tallahassee and Leon County bear their names. There are several suppositions about how the Post became Post 13. One explanation says the designation was given because 13 was the Leon County numerical designation when automobile license plates were first issued in the State of Florida. Another more colorful tale relates that, as members from around the state were on the train headed to their first caucus in Bal Harbour in 1919, members were claiming post numbers starting with Number 1. “Bidding” for designations was said to be fast and furious until “12" was taken. Into the ensuing silence Tallahassee Commander Bob Gray, who was then Secretary of State for Florida, is reported to have commented, “Hell! Hardly anything ever goes right in Tallahassee. We’ll take ‘13'!” And the rest, as they say, is history. Members met twice a month. One meeting they held at the county courthouse. For the other meeting members gathered at the Busy Bee Café. The proprietor said it was all very well and good for the group to meet in the café, but that the members would all have to buy dinner whenever they met. It was agreed and the dinner meeting started then continues today to be conducted on the fourth Thursday of every month. In 1922 Post 13 contracted to purchase a lot at the southeast corner of Duval and Call Streets near downtown Tallahassee with the intention to erect a Post Home. This lot was directly across Duval Street from the home of Senator William C. Hodges and was considered a good location. Fortunately or unfortunately there were not enough members in the Post to generate enough funds to begin construction. During the time the Post was trying to accumulate funds to build a building, local real estate developer William Anderson considered building a dance pavilion on the north shore of Buhl or Bull Pond (later called Lake Ella) in his Anderson Heights subdivision just north of town. Mr. Anderson had laid the foundation for the dance pavilion, later abandoning the project because he felt “no one would go that far out into the country to dance.” In 1924, William and his wife Alice told the American Legion Post that they could have the land with the dance pavilion foundation on it. The land encompassed lots 1 through 8 in Block “D” of Anderson Heights around the north shore of the lake. The plat map is on page 22 of Plat Book 1of Leon County. In 1923 an electric power dam was started on the Ocklocknee River about 23 miles west of Tallahassee. Guy Winthrop and K. J. Boyd of Winthrop and Boyd Engineering were engineers working on the dam construction. Guy became head of a self-appointed committee consisting of K. J. Boyd, O. J. Nettles, Treo Proctor, Sam Wahnish, George I. Martin, William R. Galt, Bill Cates, Bill Wilson and Miller Walston to see what could be done toward obtaining the necessary materials for a home. Another of the Post members, Al Moore, was an architect. He designed a structure to fit the already existing dance pavilion footprint. Some of the piers and piles of the original dance pavilion foundation remain under the building today. Since Winthrop and Boyd were engineers on the dam project, the acquisition committee had the perfect entree to the needed building materials. The story goes that excess lumber and other materials to erect a rough building were delivered via a liberated truck. Past Commander Bill Jacobs says he remembers a relative of his being in this group. He relates that “they saw where the waterline for the new lake was going to be. They went in and cut down the trees before the water rose and covered them.” Construction of the Post Home is thought to have started around 1925 and ended in 1927. The “acquisition committee” and other Legionnaires did all carpentry and other incidental work. What little money there was in the bank was used sparingly for necessities only. William and Alice Anderson formally deeded the property to the Claude L. Sauls Post of the American Legion on June 28, 1930. The transaction is registered on page 517 of Deed Book 21 of Leon County. 1930-1942 Initially a large lodge hall with grand brick fireplaces at either end of the hall, the wood frame structure encompasses about 8000 square feet. Over the years rooms have been added at both ends of the building and the outside faced with aluminum siding. The inside, however, remained rough with sideboard sheeting. The interior paneling was finished by using blowtorches to bring up the resin in the heart pine planking. When the resin cooled, the shine on the paneling was gorgeous. It still is. Post World War II During its regularly scheduled February 28, 1946, meeting, the Post membership passed a resolution to change the name of the Claude L. Sauls Post to the Sauls-Bridges Post 13 of the American Legion to also pay honor to the first Tallahassee citizen to die in the line of duty in World War II. Ben H. Bridges, Jr., was a fighter pilot who died on coastal patrol in California. The name change for the Post was officially filed with Leon County on May 22, 1958. On August 15, 1980, Harry H. Mitchell filed the update to the Articles of Incorporation to include the Post name change. Syde P. Deeb and his wife Angie R. Deeb were active Legion and Auxiliary members. On May 26, 1958, Syde and Angie deeded Lot 9 of Block “D” in the Anderson Heights subdivision as recorded on Page 50, Plat Book 2 of Leon County, Florida, to Sauls-Bridges Post No. 13, The American Legion. Now all the property around the north shore of Lake Ella belonged to Post 13. The deed is recorded on Page 493 of Deed Book 229 of Leon County. Syde and Angie also loaned the Post $7500 for improvements to the Post. In the 1950s the Veterans Lounge, which is now the Black Dog Café, was added to the structure. The Black Dog Café, a tenant business nestled in the southwest corner of the building, is a favorite gathering place for many Tallahassee citizens. 1960-the Present Now the building houses a stage and a bar in the main hall, a meeting room for Unit 13 of the American Legion Auxiliary, men’s and women’s restrooms, a foyer, a kitchen and an administrative office for the Post. In 1980 the Post approached the city about selling the Post and property to the city. Nothing came of the inquiry. Building inspection in the late 1980s helped establish priorities for building improvements which were approved by the members of the Post and the Auxiliary. The Ladies Auxiliary room was added in the 1980s. A deck just outside the Veterans Lounge/Black Dog Café was built in the mid-1990s with materials donated by Lowe’s. A deck on the lake side of the main hall is the most recent addition. The recent revitalization of Lake Ella and the surrounding park by the City of Tallahassee has increased the walking traffic around the lake and has enhanced local awareness of the Post Home. The Post Home is a landmark of historic interest in Tallahassee. Many citizens recall attending sock hops, junior-senior proms, bingo, weddings, fireworks on the 4th of July and other special occasions at the Legion Hall on Lake Ella. The importance of this structure to the history of Tallahassee was recognized when the Tallahassee Board of Historic Preservation granted provisional approval of the site as an historic place in 2001. Planned activities are scheduled at the Post throughout the week. The Tallahassee Swing Band plays for your dancing pleasure every Tuesday evening and at two benefits for the Post every year. Country Western dancing is taught on Wednesdays. A wide variety of bands and other organizations schedule activities at the Post Home for both public and private occasions. (This history has been compiled from written records in the Post archives, records on file at Leon County and in the State Archives in the R. A. Gray Building.)