Reid Avenue has been the commercial heart of Port St. Joe for nearly a century. Although facades and businesses have changed, the outline of the street has remained essentially the same. Unlike that of many towns, Port St. Joe’s main commercial street has not become a thoroughfare for traffic going elsewhere. Reid Avenue was named after John Robert Reid of St. Johns County, president of the 1838 Constitution Convention held in the Old City of St. Joseph.
In 1913 the street was macadamized with a mixture of mud and shell dredged from the bay along the railroad pier, loaded on flat cars and carried down a track constructed for that purpose. In 1922 or 1923 the city installed electric street lights along Reid Avenue. In 1939 the avenue was resurfaced with sand, gravel and asphalt.
Click on the photos below to view some earlier views of Reid Avenue
Reid Avenue, circa 1920 (click image to enlarge)
Reid Avenue, 1947 (click image to enlarge)
Masonic Hall
214 Reid Ave.
Masonic Hall
This building housed the Port St. Joe Post Office between 1920 and 1960. Henry A. Drake served as the postmaster. The lodge met upstairs and after the post office moved used the bottom floor as well.