Brohard Beach
1600 Harbor Drive South
Venice, FL 34285
Brohard Beach is
located in the southern most part of the City of Venice, on the
Venice Airport property on Harbor Drive.
Amenities:
-
84 acres of land
-
4,800 linear feet of
shoreline along the Gulf of Mexico
-
bait shop
-
City of Venice municipal
fishing pier
-
dog friendly beach
-
fishing
-
great bird watching
-
limited parking
-
passive recreation area
-
paw park
-
Pelican Man Sanctuary
-
picnicking
-
No
Lifeguards are on duty
-
rest rooms
-
Sharky’s Restaurant
-
snack bar
-
swimming
-
United States Coast Guard
Flotilla Training Center
-
wetlands
History:
-
This site became the
responsibility of the County to operate and maintain in
1992 as the result of a dual taxation settlement between
the City of Venice and Sarasota County Government.
-
The site was subsequently
added to an existing inter local agreement between the
City and County that consolidated certain City owned
parks with the County Park System in 1978.
-
(city owned, county
operated)
Caspersen
Beach
4100 Harbor Drive South
Venice, FL 34285
Caspersen Beach is
located south of the Venice Airport on Harbor Drive. The
southern two thirds of beachfront has been left in its natural
state. A dune restoration system with walkovers has been
implemented to preserve the shoreline.
Caspersen is
recognized as one of the most enjoyable shelling beaches in this
area. This is an exceptionally good area to find prehistoric
sharks’ teeth. You can see freshwater and saltwater marshes,
mangrove areas, and tidal flats. Visitors can enjoy a 20 minute
walk through Caspersen's nature trail which has been developed
through a coastal hammock.
Amenities:
-
177 acres of land
-
9,150 linear feet of gulf
beach frontage
-
1,100 foot boardwalk
-
dune walkovers
-
fishing
-
nature trail (.34 mile
trail)
-
parking
-
picnic area
-
No
Lifeguards are on duty.
-
rest rooms
-
swimming
-
undeveloped land
History:
-
Originally deeded to
Sarasota County by the Caspersen family in 1968 through
a special warranty deed that stipulated the land would
revert back to the family in 20 years.
-
In 1972, a bond referendum
was held and passed for the purpose of acquiring
Caspersen Beach and South Lido Park.
-
In 1986, the Board of County
Commissioners included the Caspersen Mainland site (64
acres) in a $20 million bond referendum which the voters
approved.
-
A friendly condemnation suit
was filed by the Caspersen family requiring the County
to prove in Federal Court the need for the land as a
public park. The court ruled in the County's favor and
established the value of the land.
-
A Land and Water
Conservation Fund grant combined with proceeds from the
bond referendum provided the funding to acquire the site
at the price established by
the court.
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