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Transcript

Tatum Building on Flagler Street

Prior to the Walgreens building, which is the current location of Julia & Henrys, the Tatum building anchored the corner of 200 East Flagler in downtown Miami from 1923 to 1926.
Cover: Tatum building can be seen on the right of this photograph of Flagler Street in 1942. Courtesy of Florida State Archives.
Cover: Tatum building can be seen on the right of this photograph of Flagler Street in 1924. Courtesy of Florida State Archives.

Length of Video: 3 minutes and 57 seconds

When the Miami Woman’s Club leadership got approval by the Model Land Company, the FEC’s property management firm, to sell the land once deeded for the exclusive use as a clubhouse and library, it didn’t take long to find a buyer. Four brothers, who moved to Miami in the early 1900s from Georgia, were managing a vibrant real estate firm called the Tatum Brothers Inc. The organization was responsible for developing parts of North Miami Beach, the Riverside neighborhood, and several neighborhoods in South Dade County, as well as many other projects around South Florida.

When the Tatum brothers purchased the former Woman’s Club and Public Library building, they planned on redeveloping the property and razing the existing structure, then construct a 12 – 15 story building in its place. However, given how busy they were managing their real estate business during the peak years of the building boom, the Tatum brothers chose to just renovate the existing building with a plan to replace it at a later date.

Figure 1: Parade on Flagler Street on April 14, 1933, celebrating Pan American Day. The Tatum building can be seen on the left in front of the Olympia Theater sign. Courtesy of Florida State Archives.
Figure 1: Parade on Flagler Street on April 14, 1933, celebrating Pan American Day. The Tatum building can be seen on the left in front of the Olympia Theater sign. Courtesy of Florida State Archives.

However, the real estate bust that began in 1926 changed the plans for many in Miami, including the Tatum Brothers. By 1932, the building’s signature tenant was no longer the real estate firm, but a dress shop called Estelles. The retailer operated out of what was still referred to as the Tatum Building until 1936 when Walgreens purchased the property for what would become their largest store in their chain of pharmacies around the country.

Click on the play button below to watch a narrated video on the history of the Tatum Building on at 200 East Flagler Street from 1923 – 1936.

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