Photo Exhibits
Photo exhibits spotlight various topics in Florida history, and are accompanied by brief text intended to place selected materials in historical context.
Alligators in the Backyard
Tourists shooting alligators from a steamship on Lake Ocklawaha (c. 1874)
Image Number: RC02126
Alligators have been hunted throughout the 19th and 20th centuries for food, their skin, for sport, and out of fear. Many steamship companies that operated in the 1800s advertised the opportunity to shoot alligators from their boats.
Alligator shot by the captain of 4th Illinois Volunteers: Jacksonville, Florida (1898)
Image Number: N041288
The captain belonged to Company G of the 4th Illinois Volunteers, staged in Jacksonville for the Spanish-American War.
Leigh M. Pearsall and daughter Edna with alligator on dock: Melrose, Florida (ca. 1905)
Image Number: RC19775
Alligator hunters in a boat with an alligator (1913)
Image Number: RC10561
Alligator hunters Hamp Hunter and Robert Burt in a boat built by Box Tedder specifically for alligator hunting.
Alligator hunter posing with the kill from a hunt (ca. 1920)
Image Number: PR00143
"This is the man that killed the gaitors, there is 30 in the bunch. They run from 12 in. to 12 ft. long."
Alligator skins confiscated by the Florida Game and Freshwater Fish Commission (1960s)
Image Number: FW00328
By the 1960s, alligators were hunted to near extinction, leading the Federal and state laws banning the hunting of the species.