The park has a playground, swing-set, picnic tables, fishing pier, trails and a restroom that is open from 8:00AM to 9:00PM daily. It's the perfect place to watch the sunrise or sunset, fish, or walk a leashed pet.
The Whitaker Gateway Park Fishing Pier is now open!
Back in 2017, Hurricane Irma destroyed the fishing pier. With the project mostly funded by FEMA, and the help from our amazing Landscaping Department, the pier project is now complete!
DETAILS:
๐ฃ 70โ Long by 8โ Wide
๐ฃ Stainless Steel Fasteners
๐ฃ Composite Decking - Recycled Wood & Plastic Materials
๐ฃ Piling is Wrapped to Prevent Wood-Boring Insects
Whitaker Family History - Historical Marker
William Henry Whitaker arrived in Sarasota Bay in the early 1840s. He built a cedar log cabin at โYellow Bluffs,โ part of nearly 200 acres he would acquire along the bay between Hog Creek and today's Indian Beach Road. Initially a fisherman, Whitaker later added cattle and a citrus grove to his homestead.
Whitaker married Mary Jane Wyatt from Manatee in 1851. They raised eight children to adulthood. During the Third Seminole War, Whitaker joined a local militia unit. After their home was burned by the Seminoles, the Whitakers built their second home adjacent to the family cemetery on today's 12th Street, east of the Tamiami Trail.
During the Civil War, Whitaker's growing cattle herd provided beef for the Confederate forces. His family experienced hardships from the Union naval blockade and occasional raids for food. After the war, Whitaker helped facilitate the escape of Confederate Secretary of State, Judah P. Benjamin, from Sarasota Bay to the Bahamas.
The Whitakers and other early settlers provided food and shelter for the colonists who arrived from Scotland in 1885 to create a new town of Sarasota.
(Side Two)
Gateway 2000 Executive Committee
The City of Sarasota salutes the Gateway 2000 Executive Committee for its efforts since 1987 to improve the North Tamiami Trail and its vision for the future of the area. This vision created the environment leading to the development of Whitaker Gateway Park. In accepting this honor, the Gateway 2000 Executive Committee expresses its appreciation to the Commissioners and staff of the City of Sarasota for their cooperation and support in making these improvements possible. The founding Chairman of Gateway 2000 was Dr. Arland F. Christ-Janer. Members of the Committee represent the following companies and organizations:
North Trail Association
Indian Beach/Sapphire Shores Homeowners Association
Downtown Association of Sarasota
Ringling School of Art and Design
Hyatt Sarasota
Florida West Coast Symphony
New College Foundation
The Folsom Group