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Jacksonville's
Architectural Heritage: About The Book
Jacksonville's
Architectural Heritage: Landmarks for the Future, a
424-page book produced by the Jacksonville Historic Landmarks
Commission
in 1989, has been the city's most popular book for nearly a decade. It
has won numerous awards and has been recognized nationally.
Written
by Dr. Wayne
W. Wood, with research assistance from Joel McEachin and Steve Tool,
Jacksonville's
Architectural Heritage is the most comprehensive work ever published on
Jacksonville's architecture.
It is
published by
University Press of Florida, which also features many other
publications
about Florida history.
The
Jacksonville Historic
Landmarks Commission is now known as The Jacksonville
Preservation Commission, a city government body which administers
ordinances
for the protection of historical resources in Duval County.
Jacksonville's Architectural
Heritage
Is Available from JHS
Out of print for several years, this best-selling book
is now available
through the Historical Society.
Limited quantities are available! Purchase your copy now
and have it personally autographed by author Dr. Wayne Wood!
Proceeds go to The Jacksonville Historical
Society.
Make check
payable to "The Jacksonville
Historical Society"
($49.95 +
3.25 tax = $53.20)
(Add $7.10 if you
want it shipped
to you)
Send order with payment to:
The Jacksonville Historical
Society
317 A. Philip Randolph Blvd.
Jacksonville, FL 32202-2217
About the book:
In 1989, a book went on sale in Jacksonville that became
an overnight
sensation. It was a book that spoke to citizens from all walks of
life in a way that few publications before or since have ever
accomplished.
It was a book that told our city’s history through its buildings.
It examined the lives of the men and women who have shaped
Jacksonville,
telling their stories in a way that made history come alive. Both
scholarly and entertaining, lavishly illustrated and artistically
designed,
this book now rests on more coffee tables than perhaps any book in
Florida.
It has simply become Jacksonville’s book.
A decade later, Jacksonville’s Architectural
Heritage: Landmarks
for the Future is still a best-selling book and an often quoted
reference
work used by teachers, journalists, researchers and a broad
cross-section
of north Florida’s citizens.
The book’s author, Dr. Wayne Wood, is the founder of
Riverside Avondale
Preservation, Inc. In 1994 Wayne wrote another book, The
Living
Heritage of Riverside & Avondale, and is currently working
on
new book about the Great 1901 Fire of Jacksonville.
Assisting Wood in the production of Jacksonville’s
Architectural
Heritage were research geniuses Joel W. McEachin and Stephen J.
Tool,
Jr. A majority of the nearly 1,000 photos in the book were taken
by Judy Davis.
This 424-page volume about the history of this
city's architecture
went on sale in December of 1989 and was sold out in ten days.
The
book has won numerous awards. After being out of print for nearly
two years, it was re-published in its fourth reprinting in December,
1996
and was on the local Best Seller list for over a year, including three
months as the number-one book.
The book and its author have won
numerous honors
and awards:
- The Florida Trust for Historic Preservation –
Preservation Education
Honor
Award
- Jacksonville Historic Landmarks Commission –
Outstanding Community
Service
Award
- Jacksonville Historic Landmarks Commission – Best
Preservation
Publication
Award
- American Institute of Architects Jacksonville Chapter
– Community
Service
Award of Merit
- Arts Assembly of Jacksonville Outstanding Individual
Award
- Jacksonville Historical Society's Achievement Award
- The book was on the Florida Times-Union’s "Best
Seller’s" List for over
one year, including being the number-one best seller in Jacksonville
for
many months.
- On the University Press of Florida’s Best Seller List.
The book has been reviewed in
numerous local and
national publications, including:
- The National Trust for Historic Preservation’s Historic
Preservation
Magazine (". . . . provides a handsome model for other cities.")
- The Journal of the Society of Architectural
Historians (". . . .a
strong statement for preservation. It is a welcome addition to
the
body of scholarly works on Florida’s architectural heritage.")
- The Florida Trust for Historic Preservation’s Florida
Preservation
News
(". . . . an important accomplishment in the field of preservation
education
in Florida . . . . an outstanding example of preservation scholarship.")
- The Florida Times-Union (". . . . an effort
to
make the future worth
inhabiting.")
Folio Weekly (". . . . a fascinating excursion
through the city’s
history.")
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