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Allendale, St. Petersburg


The Allendale Terrace section of St. Petersburg, FL, located at 34th to 42nd Avenues North and from 7th to M.L. King (9th) Streets North plus the area between 34th and 38th Avenues North from M.L. King (9th) Street to Haines Rd., is considered by many to be the finest non-waterfront area of St. Petersburg.

Noted for being on high ground, stately old oak trees, large estate homes built in the 1920s and 1930s and brick streets, the neighborhood is mostly residential. 74 homes were built here prior to World War II. There were 186 built from the beginning of the war to 1960, and about 50 homes since then. The homes are 86% owner-occupied, 63 homes with pools, 94 homes have fireplaces, and the median heated square footage is 1,500.

Allendale 2 story home According to some historians, Allendale Terrace can trace its roots to a 1920s hurricane. A picture of the St. Petersburg Yacht Club underwater, publicized in the St. Petersburg Times, dampened some of the interest in waterfront property that Snell was developing at that time. Cade B. Allen purchased 160 acres of high ground bound to the east by 7th Street North, to the west by 12th Street, to the south by 34th Avenue, and to the north by 42nd Avenue. Haines Road, a major road to downtown St. Petersburg, was part of the southwestern edge of Allendale Terrace.

Ninth Street (then known as Euclid Boulevard) was the major street in the development and the first houses built faced it. A trolley line ran from downtown to 34th Avenue North and then turned east to Locust Street NE. It was more for sightseeing than it was for transportation since there were few houses and no businesses along the route.

Allendale Terrace may have been the first neighborhood association in St. Petersburg to form. Established mainly to stop a developer from building a commercial building on 9th Street between 35th and 36th Avenues, the organization achieved little else. The developer was unable to get the zoning change he needed and was stuck with the land he had already purchased. This organization faded away, but was continued in spirit by the Allendale Terrace Garden Club. The Garden Club was never formally organized; however they erected the signs that stand today at the entrances to the neighborhood and made improvements to Allendale Park.

While still forming, a task force was established to request a grant to improve Allendale Park and to refurbish the five Allendale Terrace signs. The grant was approved with the neighborhood providing half of the effort in "sweat equity". Ideas for future projects are distinctive street signs, development of a logo, additional improvement in the Park, and an on going effort to coordinate with other neighborhood associations on the borders.


Adapted from www.stpete.org

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