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August 2,
2006
Florida Today
Part of
causeway named for author
BY RAY OSBORNE
FOR FLORIDA TODAY
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Author honored.
Admirers of the new road sign giving the
causeway its new name of the Patrick
Smith Causeway. Patrick Smith's personal
friend Domingo Hernandez; Patrick Smith;
state Rep. Bob Allen; Iris Smith; Eldon
Lux; state Sen. Bill Posey; and
Secretary of State Sue Cobb. Ray
Osborne, for FLORIDA TODAY
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MERRITT ISLAND¯ — A crowd of about 60 people gathered
this week along a stretch of State Road 520 to honor
author Patrick Smith and the causeway that had just been
named for him.
Signs alerting drivers and passers-by to the Patrick D.
Smith Causeway were unveiled at the roadside ceremony on
Tuesday, which attracted Florida’s Secretary of State
Sue Cobb, Sen. Bill Posey, R-Rockledge, County
Commissioner Ron Pritchard and plenty of well-wishers.
“We don’t normally name roads after people while they
are alive, because if they do something off the track,
it will make us look bad, but with Patrick Smith, we
felt safe,” said Posey, who sponsored a bill in the
Florida Senate last session to honor the author with the
two-mile stretch of State Road 520 west of Cape
Canaveral Hospital.
Smith, who lives on Merritt Island with his wife Iris,
is one of Florida’s most renowned authors. In 2002, he
received the Fay Schweim Award from the Florida
Historical Society, a one-time award emblematic of the
“Greatest Living Floridian.”
His seven novels — The River Is Home, The Beginning,
Forever Island, Angel City, Allapattah, A Land
Remembered and The Seas That Mourn — remain
critically acclaimed today and have drawn three
nominations for Pulitzer Prizes.
He was nominated for a Nobel Prize in 1985 for his
lifetime achievement.
Smith was born in 1927 in Mississippi and came to
Florida in 1966,
In joking with the crowd about the honor, Smith said he
would immediately install a 25 cent toll on his new
bridge, which draw laughs from the gathered crowd.
Organizers chose Aug. 1 as the ceremony’s date to
coincide with Smith’s 58th wedding anniversary.
“We thought it would be cooler on an August day,” Posey
said.
To close the event, sheriff’s deputy Steve Reeves gave
Smith a ride past the shiny new commemorative causeway
sign and over the bridge, marking the author’s first
official trip on his road. |