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First Coast
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==History== As its name suggests, the First Coast was the first area of Florida [[European colonization of the Americas|colonized by Europeans]], at [[Fort Caroline, Florida]], in 1564. However, as with several other of Florida's vernacular regions, the "First Coast" identity originated in the tourism industry of the 20th Century before it was adopted within the community at large.<ref name=Lamme330331>Lamme & Oldakowski, pp. 330β331.</ref> In 1983 the [[Jacksonville]] Chamber of Commerce commissioned the William Cook Advertising Agency to develop a new nickname and comprehensive marketing campaign for the entire [[Jacksonville metropolitan area|metropolitan area]] β [[Duval County, Florida|Duval]], [[Baker County, Florida|Baker]], [[Clay County, Florida|Clay]], [[Nassau County, Florida|Nassau]], and [[St. Johns County, Florida|St. Johns]] counties. Jacksonville already had other nicknames, but local officials wanted a new identity to better promote the entire region without overshadowing the identities of the individual localities. The term "Florida's First Coast" was coined by William Cook staff members Kay Johnson, Bryan Cox, and Bill Jones, and was officially introduced in the "First Coast Anthem" at the 1983 [[Gator Bowl]].<ref name=Calnan>{{cite news |title= The birth of the 'First Coast'|author= Christopher Calnan|url= http://jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/110602/bus_10891102.shtml |newspaper= [[The Florida Times-Union]] |date= November 6, 2002 |access-date=January 4, 2015|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160105040621/http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/110602/bus_10891102.shtml#.Wvb68JcpDZs|archive-date=January 5, 2016}}</ref> The First Coast is similar to Florida's various other [[List of coasts of Florida|"Coast" regions]] such as the [[Space Coast]] and the [[Gold Coast (Florida)|Gold Coast]] that emerged as a result of marketing campaigns.<ref name=Lamme330331/> The name refers both to the area's geographic status as the "first coast" that many visitors reach when entering Florida, as well as to the region's history as the first place in the continental United States to see European contact and settlement.<ref name=Lamme332333>Lamme & Oldakowski, pp. 332β333.</ref> [[Juan Ponce de LeΓ³n]] may have landed in this region during his first expedition in 1513, and the early French colony of [[Fort Caroline]] was founded in present-day Jacksonville in 1564. Significantly, the First Coast includes [[St. Augustine, Florida|St. Augustine]], the oldest continuously inhabited European-established city in the continental U.S., founded by the Spanish in 1565.<ref name=Calnan/> A 2007 survey by geographers Ary J. Lamme and Raymond K. Oldakowski notes that the term "First Coast" has superseded two earlier geographical appellations for the region: "Florida's Crown" and "South Georgia", attested in earlier surveys. The former term refers to the area's northern location and the shape of the Georgia border, while the latter emphasizes that the local culture was considered more similar to that of [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]] and the [[Southern United States|South]] in general than to the lower Florida peninsula. A conscious push to supplant potentially uncomplimentary connotations may have led to the decline of "South Georgia" in favor of "First Coast"; this coincides with a waning of terms such as "[[Old South]]" and "[[Dixie]]" in much of the state. The name "First Coast" reinforces the region's connection to the rest of Florida, an important perceptual tie-in for attracting residents, businesses, and tourists.<ref name=Lamme332333/> The term "First Coast" became very popular through the 1980s, surprising even its creators. In 1990, Duval County opened its first new high schools in nearly 20 years, and at one of them, the students chose to name their school [[First Coast High School]]. By 2002, nearly 800 organizations and businesses included "First Coast" in their name, to the point that Jacksonville's [[NBC]] and [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]] affiliates, [[WTLV]] and [[WJXX]] (both jointly owned and operated by [[Tegna, Inc.|Tegna]]), have branded their [[local news]] operation as "First Coast News" since the early 2000s.<ref name=Calnan/> Lamme and Oldakowski found that in 2007, 18% of Floridians surveyed were familiar with the First Coast, making it one of the best-known vernacular regions by Floridians.<ref>Lamme & Oldakowski, p. 333.</ref> The First Coast identity has spread to other nearby areas, being found as far south as [[Flagler Beach, Florida|Flagler Beach]] in [[Flagler County, Florida]] and [[Palatka, Florida|Palatka]] in [[Putnam County, Florida]], and as far north as [[St. Mary's, Georgia]].<ref name=Dixon>{{cite news |title= Historic Coast latest in a growing number of Florida coastal monikers|author= Drew Dixon|url= http://jacksonville.com/news/metro/2013-07-27/story/historic-coast-latest-growing-number-florida-coastal-monikers |newspaper= [[The Florida Times-Union]] |date= July 28, 2013 |access-date=February 28, 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.metrojacksonville.com/article/2015-feb-jaxlore-folklore-urban-legends-and-regionalisms |title= Jaxlore: Folklore, Urban Legends, and Regionalisms |last1= Delaney |first1= Bill |date= February 8, 2015 |website= www.metrojacksonville.com |publisher= [[Metro Jacksonville]] |access-date= February 5, 2015 }}</ref> In 2013, the ''[[Florida Times-Union]]'' noted that within the area, St. Johns County had begun to brand itself as the "Historic Coast".<ref name=Dixon/>
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