-
Viewer is facing north on Forsyth St. The church is located on the right of the picture.
-
This room served as a breezeway on hot evenings. It is located above the formal side entry.
-
east view of rear facade facing Bayou Texar
-
rear facade facing Bayou Texar
-
This is the second depot, built in 1909. Electric lights were added in 1917, but the sole heating source remained a pot-bellied stove that is still used today.
-
The side entrance is accessed on Baylen Street.
-
Magnolia leaves are the ground cover under the trees.
-
A double glass door leads from the backyard into the Florida Room.
-
The bottom floor is utilized as a garage and workspace. It was designed with break-away walls because of high tides during hurricane tidal surges.
-
This is a view of the east facade of the T. T. Wentworth Museum. The Pensacola Historical Museum is located in the left corner of the photograph.
-
second floor porch - south view
-
The building is part of the State of Florida village complex.
-
Barrier beaches are one of the world's most restless landforms. As can be seen above the tress are growing on shifting sand which looks like snow.
-
The sand pine forest is located on the sound side of the key on older dunes.
-
In contrast to the species of pine shown below, the sand pine is much shorter. Its form can be twisted with lower branches growing close to the ground.
-
The overstory in some locations is composed of an older growth of short-leafed pine tree.
-
Florida rosemary is a sand-loving evergreen shrub.
-
Pine stumps decay slowly on the dry sandy forest floor.
-
Pieces of pine scrub trees decay slowly because of the high content of sap.
-
The shapes of the dead pine trees form a natural barrier in the undergrowth of Florida rosemary.
-
Lichens and mosses grown on the scrub pine trucks.
-
second floor back porch