St. Petersburg, Florida

St. Petersburg is a city in Pinellas County, Florida, United States. It is known as a vacation destination for both American and foreign tourists. As of the 2010 census, the population was 244,769, making St. Petersburg the fourth most populous city in the state of Florida and the largest city in Florida that is not a county seat. Although the city of Clearwater is the county seat of Pinellas County, all county services are available through county offices in St. Petersburg. St. Petersburg is the second largest city in the Tampa Bay Area, which is composed of roughly 2.8 million residents, making it the second largest Metropolitan Statistical Area in the state.

The city is often referred to by locals as St. Pete. Neighboring St. Pete Beach formally shortened its name in 1994 after a vote by its residents.

The city is located on a peninsula between Tampa Bay and the Gulf of Mexico. It is connected to mainland Florida to the north; with the city of Tampa to the east by causeways and bridges across Tampa Bay; and to Bradenton in the south by the Sunshine Skyway Bridge (Interstate 275), which traverses the mouth of the bay. It is also served by Interstates 175 and 375, which branch off I-275 into the southern and northern areas of downtown respectively. The Gandy Bridge, conceived by George Gandy and opened in 1924, was the first causeway to be built across Tampa Bay, connecting St. Petersburg and Tampa cities without a circuitous 43 mi trip around the bay through Oldsmar.

With a purported average of some 360 days of sunshine each year, it is nicknamed "The Sunshine City". For that reason, the city has long been a popular retirement destination, especially for those in the United States from colder Northern climates. This reputation earned the city the derisive nickname of "God's waiting room". In recent years, though, the population has shifted in a more youthful direction. American Style magazine ranked St. Petersburg its top mid-size city in 2011, citing its "vibrant" arts scene.

History
The city was co-founded by John C. Williams, formerly of Detroit, who purchased the land in 1876, and by Peter Demens, who was instrumental in bringing the terminus of a railroad there in 1888. St. Petersburg was incorporated on February 29, 1892, when it had a population of only some 300 people.

It was named after Saint Petersburg, Russia, where Peter Demens had spent half of his youth. A local legend says that John C. Williams and Peter Demens flipped a coin to see who would have the honor of naming the city. Peter Demens won and named the city after his home, while John C. Williams named the first hotel after his birthplace, Detroit (a hotel built by Demens ). The Detroit Hotel still exists downtown, but has been turned into a condominium. The oldest running hotels are the historic Pier Hotel, built in 1921, formally Hotel Cordova and The Heritage Hotel, built in 1926.

Philadelphia publisher F. A. Davis turned on St. Petersburg's first electrical service in 1897 and its first trolley service in 1904. The city's first major industry was born in 1899 when Henry W. Hibbs, 1862–1942, a native of Newport, North Carolina, established his wholesale fish business at the end of the railroad pier, which extended out to the shipping channel. Within a year, Hibbs Fish Company was shipping more than 1000 lb of fish each day.

Dredging of a deeper shipping channel from 1906 to 1908 opened St. Petersburg to larger shipping. Further dredging improved the port facilities through the 1910s. By then the city's population had quadrupled to 4,127.

In 1914, airplane service across Tampa Bay from St. Petersburg to Tampa and back was initiated, generally considered the first commercial airline. The company name was the St. Petersburg–Tampa Airboat Line, and the pilot was Tony Jannus, flying a Benoist XIV flying boat. The Tony Jannus Award is presented annually for outstanding achievement in the airline industry. Jannus Landing, a local music/entertainment venue on Central Avenue in downtown, is also named after him.

The city population continued to multiply during the 20th century, booming in the 1940s and 1950s with the advent of air conditioning and through the 1970s as the town became a popular retirement destination for Americans from midwestern cities, reaching 238,647 in the 1980 census. By that time, however, the population had levelled off, and has grown by only 10,000 since then; this is primarily a result of the city being largely "built out". In the decade from 2000 to 2010, the population of the city dropped by approximately 4000 residents, while in the same period the population of Florida increased by over two and a half million residents.

Geography and climate
St. Petersburg is located at 27.77306°N, -82.64°W (27.773053, −82.639983).

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 356.4 sqkm. 159.9 sqkm of it is land, and 196.5 sqkm of it (55.13%) is water.

St. Petersburg has a humid subtropical climate (Koppen Cfa), closely bordering a tropical savanna climate, with a definite rainy season from June through September. St. Petersburg, like the rest of the Tampa Bay area, is occasionally affected by tropical storms and hurricanes. However, the last time a hurricane directly struck the city was in 1921. Many portions of St. Petersburg, especially along the bay and in south St. Petersburg, have tropical microclimates. Royal palms and coconut palms, as well as other tropical plants, grow to maturity. But coconuts may have a hard time producing fruit.

Demographics
As of 2010, there were 129,401 households out of which 15.9% were vacant. As of 2000, 23.85% of households had children under the age of 18 living with them, 37.295% were married couples living together, 13.8% had a female householder with no adult living partner present, and 43.8% were non-families. 35.6% of all households were made up of individuals and 13.3% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.10 and the average family size was 2.865.

In 2000, the city's population was spread out with 21.5% under the age of 18, 7.7% from 18 to 24, 30.2% from 25 to 44, 23.1% from 45 to 64, and 17.4% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 39.24 years. For every 100 females there were 91.2 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 87.7 males.

As of 2000, the median income for a household in the city was $34,597, and the median income for a family was $43,198. Males had a median income of $30,794 versus $27,860 for females. The per capita income for the city was $21,107. About 9.2% of families and 13.3% of the population were below the poverty line, including 19.1% of those under age 18 and 10.8% of those age 65 or over. In 2010 17.8% of the population was under the poverty line, including 32.2% of those under age 18 and 14.1% of those age 65 or over.

Languages
As of 2000, those who spoke only English at home accounted were 88.53% of residents, Spanish was spoken by 4.43%, German by 0.78%, French by 0.72% of speakers, Vietnamese by 0.67%, Serbo-Croatian by 0.52%, and Laotian by 0.51% of the population.

Largest employers
According to the City's 2011 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, the largest employers in the city are:

Attractions and points of interest
The city has a children's museum (Great Explorations), Museum of Fine Arts, The St. Petersburg Museum of History (which has a full-size replica of the Benoist seaplane and is located near the approximate spot by the St. Petersburg Pier where the first flight took place), a Holocaust Museum, and the Salvador Dali Museum, which houses the largest collection of Dalí's works outside of Europe, including a number of famous and large-scale paintings such as The Discovery of America by Christopher Columbus. The Chihuly Collection at 400 Beach Drive houses some of the magnificent glass sculptures of Dale Chihuly. There are also various other smaller art galleries and entertainment venues, especially in the downtown area, which has seen a boom in development since the mid 1990s; these include the Mahaffey Theater complex, American Stage (an equity regional theater), The Coliseum, and Palladium Theatre, and the Midtown Royal Theater, The Arts Center, and the Florida Craftsmen Gallery.

The St. Petersburg Pier is a popular tourist attraction. It contains a small aquarium open to the public, retail shopping, adventure activities, and both casual and fine dining restaurants. Various sightseeing boat rides are also offered. The Bounty, a replica of HMS Bounty that was used in the 1962 Technicolor remake of Mutiny on the Bounty, starring Marlon Brando, was permanently docked near the Pier for many years until the ship was sold to Ted Turner in 1986. The Bounty, however, sometimes visited St. Petersburg for the winter in the following years before its sinking in 2012. In 2010, the St. Petersburg City Council voted to demolish and rebuild the pier within two years.

The city had a Madame Tussaud Wax Museum between 1963 and 1989.

Downtown is the location of the BayWalk shopping complex which contains an IMAX Muvico 20-screen movie theater, as well as many chain restaurants and retail shops, catering to more of a middle and upper class audience. BayWalk is also a nightlife destination, although it is less well attended than the block surrounding Jannus Landing, just south of BayWalk. Central Avenue, from the Yacht Club west to 8th Street, is also both more vibrant and "organic" than BayWalk with the exception of a couple underdeveloped blocks. Restaurants serving ethnic and domestic culinary specialties can be found throughout the downtown area. Every Saturday morning, from October to May, the downtown area hosts a farmers' market in the parking area of Al Lang Field (now Progress Energy Park). Local vendors sell the fruits of their labors (whether edible or decorative) alongside artists of all kinds including live music. As of 2010, Baywalk is virtually deserted, with only Muvico remaining to anchor the complex.

Due west of downtown on Central Avenue is a district called Grand Central which is contained within Historic Kenwood. It is known for its artistic community, LGBT presence and hosting of the annual St. Pete Pride parade. Like its name implies, Old Northeast is adjacent to downtown from the northeast. It is known for its historic status and eclectic architecture. Roser Park is another historic district, located just south of downtown. It is known for its stately architecture and somewhat dubiously for its proximity to the "South Side". Together, these areas comprise the urban core of St. Petersburg.

North of downtown is the Great Explorations Children's Museum, an interactive museum featuring a Children's Village with giant pretend stores, fire house and pet vet clinic, and preschool, science, music, art, and water exhibits. The museum is located next to Sunken Gardens. 4th Street as a whole, from Downtown up to Gandy Boulevard, is home to many restaurants and bars running the gamut from fast food to haute cuisine. This area is called the "Garden District", although as of 2010 this name is not widely in use.

Boyd Hill Nature Park, located on Lake Maggiore, is a 245 acre preserve where one can see many of the endangered plants and rare wildlife of Tampa Bay. There is a bird exhibit which houses bald eagles, owls, hawks, and other species.

St. Petersburg is well regarded for its beaches. In 2005, Fort De Soto was rated the number one beach in America by the annual Dr. Beach rankings. TripAdvisor had the beach ranked number one in the nation for 2008. Also noted for its arts community, St. Petersburg regularly places top 25 in the nation among arts destinations Recently, St. Petersburg has become known and regarded as one of America's most livable cities.

Downtown
Downtown St. Petersburg is the Central Business District, containing high rises for office use, most notably the One Progress Plaza. The Tampa Bay Times newspaper is headquartered in the downtown area. The Poynter Institute, which owns the paper, is located on 3rd Street S.

The Mahaffey Theater complex, the Morean Arts Center, dozens of other art galleries, Haslam's used book store, The Coliseum, Palladium Theatre, and Jannus Landing are among the galleries and cultural venues featured downtown. Several prominent museums are located in the perimeter. Many of them have received notable accolades, including the Chihuly Collection presented by the Morean Arts Center, the Museum of Fine Arts, the Salvador Dali Museum, the Florida International Museum, the St. Petersburg Museum of History, and the Florida Holocaust Museum. The city also plays host to many festivals throughout the year.

Downtown contains the University of South Florida St. Petersburg, and a downtown branch of St. Petersburg College. The downtown perimeter also houses several parks, most of which are waterfront or lakefront. Straub Park is nearly a half mile long, boasts a waterfront location, and is home of the Museum of Fine Arts. The Vinoy Park Hotel has a waterfront location, a spot on the National Register of Historic Places, and a AAA Four-Diamond rating. The area contains Vinoy Park, which holds music festivals, including the Warped Tour. Nearby is the historic Tramor Cafeteria building, now part of the St. Petersburg Times. All of the above are connected via the Looper Trolley.

Most of the dining downtown can be found on or near Central Avenue or on Beach Drive near the waterfront. Central Avenue and adjacent streets also contain most of the active nightlife scene which includes bars, lounges and clubs to suit most tastes as well as two busy concert venues: Jannus Live and the State Theatre. The nightlife scene is credited to recent demographic and regulatory changes. In 2010, the city council voted to extend bar hours until 3 A.M., identical to cross-bay "rival" Tampa.

Tropicana Field, home of Major League Baseball's Tampa Bay Rays, is located in the western part of downtown. Until 2008, the team played its spring training games at Progress Energy Park, right down the road. This setup was unique, making St. Petersburg the first city that played host to its baseball team during spring training as well as the regular season since the 1919 Philadelphia Athletics. At the end of 2007, there was a debate over a new stadium to be built on the downtown waterfront at the current Progress Energy Park site. This new ballpark would have an overhead sail to cool game-time temperatures and catch rain. Tropicana Field would be demolished and replaced with prime residential and retail space. Completion of the stadium was planned for 2012; however, the proposal has been tabled indefinitely while a community-based organization investigates all alternatives for new stadium construction.

Jutting a half mile into the bay is the St. Petersburg Pier, a major tourist attraction with various activities. Due to its livability and myriad amenities, St. Petersburg's downtown has been rated among the best in the South. The area's beaches are a 10 mi drive from downtown.

The Wikimedia Foundation had been located in downtown St. Petersburg since its founding by Jimmy Wales. On September 25, 2007, the Foundation announced its move in late 2007 from St. Petersburg to the San Francisco Bay Area.

St. Petersburg boasts the third-largest dedicated public waterfront park system in North America, with a waterfront park system that stretches 7 mi and is used year round for public events, festivals and other activities. In the early 20th century, citizens and city leaders engaged in a long and boisterous debate over the future of the young city's waterfront space, with one side advocating for commercial, port and industrial development and the other side advocating for a long-term commitment to parks and public access to the waterfront. The public access and park contingent won the debate when, on Christmas Eve 1909, the city announced the acquisition of the waterfront land that is encompassed by the waterfront park system.

The city is also becoming one of the largest destinations in Florida for kiteboarding, a relatively new water sport, with locations such as Ft. De Soto Park, Pass-a-Grille, and Ten-Cent. St. Petersburg locals such as Billy Parker and Alex Fox have gained a reputation for being some of the best kiteboarders in the world.

The St. Petersburg Shuffleboard Club was established in 1924 and gained attention as the "World's Largest Shuffleboard Club" with 110 courts and over 5,000 members in the 1950s and 1960s.

Neighborhoods
St. Petersburg has more than 100 neighborhoods.


 * Allendale
 * Allendale Terrace
 * Arlington Park
 * Azalea Homes
 * Bahama Shores
 * Barcley Estates
 * Bartlett Park
 * Bonita Bayou
 * Bayboro
 * Bayou Highlands
 * Bayway Isles
 * Big Bayou
 * Brighton Bay
 * Broadwater
 * Campbell Park
 * Carillon
 * Casler Heights
 * Causeway Isles
 * Caya Costa
 * Central Oak Park
 * Childs Park
 * Clam Bayou
 * Coquina Key
 * Crescent Heights
 * Crescent Lake
 * Cromwell Heights
 * Crossroads
 * Disston Heights
 * Downtown (North Downtown and University Park)
 * Driftwood
 * Eagle Crest
 * Eden Isle


 * Edgemoor
 * Euclid Heights
 * Euclid St. Paul's
 * Five Points
 * Fossil Park
 * Fruitland Heights
 * Garden Manor
 * Garden Manor Lake
 * Gateway
 * Graham-Rogall
 * Grand Central
 * Greater Pinellas Point
 * Greater Woodlawn
 * Harbor Isle
 * Harbordale
 * Harris Park
 * Highland Grove
 * Highland Oaks
 * Historic Kenwood
 * Historic Old Northeast/North Shore
 * Historic Roser Park
 * Historic Park Street
 * Historic Uptown
 * Holiday Park
 * Isla del Sol
 * James-Clearview
 * Jordan Park
 * Jungle Prada
 * Jungle Terrace
 * La Puerta Del Sol
 * Lake Euclid


 * Lake Maggiore Park
 * Lake Maggiore Shores
 * Lake Pasadena
 * Lakewood Estates
 * Lakewood Terrace
 * Live Oaks
 * Magnolia Heights
 * Mangrove Bay
 * Mangrove Bayou
 * Mariners Pass
 * Maximo
 * Meadowlawn
 * Mel-Tan Heights
 * Melrose-Mercy/Pine Acres
 * Methodist Town
 * Mobel Americana/Americana Cove
 * Northeast Park
 * North Kenwood
 * Oakwood Garden/Pinefield View
 * Old Bayside/St. Petersburg Marina
 * Old Northeast
 * Old Pasadena
 * Old Southeast
 * Palmetto Park
 * Pasadena Bear Creek
 * Pasadena Vista/West Lake Estates
 * Patrician Point
 * Perkins
 * Perry Bayview
 * Pinellas Point/The Pink Streets
 * Placido Bayou


 * Ponce De Leon
 * Ponderosa Shores
 * Renaissance
 * Riviera Bay
 * Riviera Bay Subdivision
 * Roser Park Historic District
 * Round Lake Historic District/Round Lake
 * Sheryl Manor
 * Shore Acres
 * Snell Gardens
 * Snell Isle
 * Sterling Manor
 * Sunset Drive
 * Tanglewood
 * Weedon Island Preserve
 * Thirteenth Street Heights
 * Thirty-First Street Neighborhood
 * Treasure Island
 * Tropical Shores
 * Twin Brooks
 * Tyrone Landing
 * Tyrone Park
 * Venetian Isles
 * Waterway Estates
 * West Neighborhood
 * Westminster Heights
 * Wildwood Heights
 * Windward Pointe
 * Winston Park
 * Woodlawn Circle
 * Woodlawn Oaks
 * Wyngate Townhomes
 * Yacht Club Estates

Airports
Nearby Tampa International Airport provides air transportation for most passengers. Smaller airlines, with destinations to smaller cities and towns, operate at St. Petersburg-Clearwater International Airport, with most tenants providing only seasonal services. Albert Whitted Airport provides general aviation services near the heart of downtown St. Pete.

Mass transit
Mass transit in St. Petersburg is provided by the Pinellas Suncoast Transit Authority (PSTA). A sightseeing trolley, called The Looper also travels to key downtown destinations daily.

Railroads
CSX Transportation operates a former Atlantic Coast Line Railroad branch line which sees daily rail traffic from north Tampa though Safety Harbor, Clearwater, and Largo. As of March 2008, the portion that ran into downtown St. Petersburg and the adjacent western industrial areas was abandoned. There is a small rail yard to the northwest of downtown St. Petersburg at the new end of the rail line with several spur lines serving industries in the area.

The former Seaboard Air Line branch from the western coastal portion of the county was abandoned in the 1980s and converted to a popular recreational trail called the Pinellas Trail.

Notable former stations include the St. Petersburg ACL station, which became an Amtrak station from 1971 to 1983, St. Petersburg Seaboard Air Line Passenger Station, and the St. Petersburg Seaboard Coast Line station.

Primary and secondary education
Public primary and secondary schools in St. Petersburg are administered by Pinellas County Schools. Public high schools within the city limits include:


 * Gibbs High School
 * Lakewood High School
 * Northeast High School
 * St. Petersburg High School

Private high schools include:
 * Canterbury School of Florida
 * St. Petersburg Catholic High School
 * Shorecrest Preparatory School
 * St. Petersburg Collegiate High School
 * Keswick Christian School

The non-profit Science Center of Pinellas County educates more than 22,000 school children annually through field trip classes and offers winter, spring and summer workshops for 2,000 more.

Higher education
St. Petersburg is home to several institutions of higher education. The University of South Florida St. Petersburg is an autonomous campus in the University of South Florida system. Eckerd College, founded in 1958, is a private four-year liberal arts college. St. Petersburg College is a state college in the Florida College System. Also in St. Petersburg is the Poynter Institute, a journalism institute which owns the St. Petersburg Times in a unique arrangement. Also, Stetson Law School is located in Gulfport, which is adjacent to St Pete between the south beaches.

Other colleges and universities in the wider Tampa Bay Area include the University of Tampa in Tampa and Hillsborough Community College, with campuses across Hillsborough County.

Media
The city's main daily morning newspapers are the Tampa Bay Times as well as its free daily sister publication tbt*. Other newspapers available in the area are the daily The Tampa Tribune and the free weekly alternative newspaper Creative Loafing. iLovetheBurg.com is an award-winning and popular online source of information for downtown St. Petersburg.

St. Petersburg is in the Tampa-St. Petersburg television and radio markets. WTSP channel 10 (CBS) and WTOG channel 44 (The CW) are licensed to St. Petersburg, with studios in unincorporated Pinellas County in the Gandy Boulevard area just north of the St. Petersburg limits. Bay News 9, the local cable TV news service, is based in northeast St. Petersburg. Independent station WTTA is licensed to St. Petersburg, with studios in Tampa. The city of St. Petersburg owns WSPF-CD channel 38, which broadcasts city government programming.

Cable television service is provided by Bright House Networks and Knology, as well as fiber optic service provider Verizon FiOS.

Sports
The Tampa-St. Petersburg area is represented by teams in four major professional sports (soccer, football, baseball, and hockey). Two teams, the Tampa Bay Rays of Major League Baseball and Tampa Bay Rowdies of the North American Soccer League play in St. Petersburg proper, while the other two teams play across the bay in Tampa. All of the teams are considered to represent the entire Tampa Bay metropolitan area.

The Rays began play in 1998, finishing last in the American League's East Division in nine of the first ten seasons they played, including their last year known as the "Devil Rays": 2007. However, in 2008, their 11th season, they held off the Boston Red Sox and won the AL East Division Championship for the first time. In the playoffs, they again faced the Red Sox in the ALCS. They defeated Boston and won the American League Pennant. However, they lost to the Philadelphia Phillies in the 2008 World Series.

From their inception until 2008, the Rays played their regular season games at Tropicana Field and their spring training games at Progress Energy Park, giving them the unique distinction of being the only team in Major League Baseball that played its spring training games in their home city in more than 70 years. However, starting in 2009, the Rays have held spring training at Charlotte Sports Park in Port Charlotte, ending a 94-year streak of springtime baseball in the city.

Tropicana Field, the home venue of the Rays, played host to the 1999 Final Four. St. Petersburg is also home to the Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, the inaugural race was held in April 2005. The circuit itself is made of downtown streets passing Progress Energy Park, the marina, and a runway in Albert Whitted Airport, and streets are temporarily blocked off for the annual Indy Racing League's IndyCar Series race. The race has been confirmed to return every year until at least 2017. In 2012, the road intersecting Turn 10 was renamed Dan Wheldon Way in memory of Dan Wheldon, who won the 2005 race thanks to a move made on that turn. Wheldon was killed in an accident at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway in the 2011 season finale.

The Tampa Bay Rowdies of the North American Soccer League began to play at Al Lang Stadium in April 2011, moving from George M. Steinbrenner Field after the 2010 season. They initially were going to play at Al Lang Stadium for 2 years however, on September 12, 2012, the Rowdies announced that they would be play at Al Lang stadium for a further 4 years.

Al Lang Stadium was named in honor of Al Lang, a former mayor of St. Petersburg who was responsible for bringing baseball spring training to the city in 1914.

See the Tampa Bay Area page for more details.

St. Petersburg is the home of many past and present sports icons. WBC and IBF Light Middleweight Champion Ronald "Winky" Wright and IBF, IBO, and WBO Champion Jeff Lacy hail from the area. Ernest Givins, Stacey Simmons, William Floyd, and Pat Terrell are some of the famous retired National Football League players from the city. Shaun King, Marquell Blackell, Aveion Cason, Darren Howard, Tim Carter, Kenny Heatly, and DeAndrew Rubin are some players currently in the NFL from the city. Major League Baseball pitcher Doug Waechter is also from St. Pete, as well as Minnesota Twins pitcher Boof Bonser. Indy Racing League driver and two-time Indianapolis 500 champion Dan Wheldon (2005 and 2011) resided in St. Pete prior to his death in October 2011.

The Bay Area Pelicans Rugby Football Club has made their home in St. Petersburg since 1977. The Pelicans play in USA Rugby's Division II competing against teams throughout Florida and the United States. Throughout its history, the teams have won honors as Florida Cup Champions as well as berths in National Championship Tournaments.

Despite not having a team in the city since 2000 (with the St. Petersburg Devil Rays), St. Petersburg is home to Minor League Baseball's main headquarters.

The International Shuffleboard Association was founded in St. Petersburg in 1979.

Former professional strongman Elliott Hulse also resides in St. Petersburg, he runs his own gym known as Strength camp which is renown for producing fine athletes and is a destination for all who wish to grow stronger.

Sister cities

 * 🇯🇵 Takamatsu, Japan
 * 🇷🇺 Saint Petersburg, Russia

Notable natives and residents

 * Kurt Abbott, MLB shortstop for the Oakland Athletics
 * Jack Albright, MLB shortstop for the Philadelphia Phillies
 * Mike Alstott, retired professional football player for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers
 * Rolando Arrojo, former baseball player; one of the first free agents signed by the Tampa Bay Devil Rays
 * B5, boy group
 * Lynn Barry, basketball player
 * Angela Bassett, actress
 * Bubba the Love Sponge, radio personality
 * Al Capone, Prohibition-era gangster
 * Spencer Chamberlain, lead singer of Underoath
 * Billy Corgan, Smashing Pumpkins band member
 * Charlie Crist, former governor of Florida
 * Linda Crockett aka Christina Crockett, writer
 * Jeff D'Amico, MLB pitcher for the Milwaukee Brewers, New York Mets, Pittsburgh Pirates and Cleveland Indians
 * Deicide, death metal band
 * Megan Fox, actress
 * Michael France, film screenwriter
 * Hobart Freeman, author and charismatic preacher
 * Ernest Givins, former football player
 * Dwight Gooden, baseball player
 * Nicole Haislett, Olympic gold medalist in swimming
 * Jack Hardy, MLB pitcher for the Chicago White Sox
 * Jack Kerouac, leading figure of the beat generation
 * Kipkay, Television and Internet video star
 * Bobby Kline, MLB shortstop for the Washington Senators
 * Casey Kotchman, MLB first baseman for the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Atlanta Braves, Boston Red Sox, Seattle Mariners, Tampa Bay Rays and Cleveland Indians
 * Ben Kozlowski, MLB pitcher for the Texas Rangers
 * Sierra Kusterbeck, singer of VersaEmerge
 * Jeff Lacy, professional boxer
 * Al Lang, former mayor of St. Petersburg (died 1960)
 * John Loftus, former U.S. Justice Department Nazi war crimes prosecutor, the president of the Florida Holocaust Museum, and terrorism expert
 * Gordon Mackenzie, former Major League Baseball player and minor league manager
 * Nick Masset, MLB pitcher for the Texas Rangers, Chicago White Sox and Cincinnati Reds
 * Alexis Mateo, female impersonator and contestant on RuPaul's Drag Race
 * Mark Mendelblatt, yachtsman, silver medalist at 1999 Pan American Games and 2004 Laser World Championships
 * Mystery Monkey of Tampa Bay
 * Johnny Nee, baseball scout
 * Dan O'Brien, MLB pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals
 * Nate Oliver, MLB second baseman for the Los Angeles Dodgers, San Francisco Giants, New York Yankees and Chicago Cubs
 * Ron Plaza, former Major League Baseball player and minor league manager
 * Ray Robson, a young chess master
 * Charles Roser, cookie maker, real estate developer, and philanthropist
 * Mark Rotella, writer, author of Stolen Figs and Amore
 * George Smith, MLB second baseman for the Detroit Tigers and Boston Red Sox
 * Roy Smith, MLB pitcher for the Cleveland Indians
 * Marreese Speights, NBA playerfor plays for the Memphis Grizzlies
 * Special Generation, boy band, singing group that started at Lakewood Senior High in the 1980s
 * Elmo Tanner, whistler, singer, big-band leader
 * Casey Turner, Big Brother 11 contestant
 * Doug Waechter. MLB pitcher for the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, Florida Marlins and Kansas City Royals
 * Jimmy Wales, Wikipedia founder
 * Sean Waltman, professional wrestler
 * Dan Wheldon, Indy Racing League driver (killed in 15-car crash on October 16, 2011)
 * Ernest Vincent Wright, author of Gadsby, a 50,000-word lipogram
 * Winky Wright, professional boxer
 * Omali Yeshitela, civil rights activist