In the years following World War II, Tampa Bay's barrier island beaches
were transformed from a sparsely populated strip to a booming vacation
destination. Following the war's end, fond memories of beachside
training exercises amid sand and sea attracted thousands of former G.I.s
and their families to the area for vacation. This sudden outbreak of
tourism caught the attention of developers, who quickly converted the
lonely stretches of beach into a vacationer's paradise, complete with
snazzy motels offering the latest amenities. Once home to fishermen and
well-to-do winter vacationers, the area's gulf beaches became a popular
getaway for newly prosperous middle-class families, anxious to put
war-weary years behind them.