If you’re looking for a village that exudes “Old Florida” charm, Tarpon Springs is a welcoming community. It’s located on the Gulf Coast side of the state near Tampa and St. Petersburg.
Today, about 26,675 people live in
Tarpon Springs, and up to 25% of the population has descended from Greek
immigrants. (The city has the highest per capita concentration of Greek
Americans in the United States.)
An influx of Greek “skin divers” who arrived in the mid-1900s to harvest the sponges that grow on the ocean floor is the reason why Tarpon Springs also became known as the “Sponge Capital of the World.”
Visitors can experience the
epicenter of Tarpon Springs’ “Little Greece” heritage by strolling Dodecanese
Boulevard to listen to the music, interact with the merchants and observe the activity
aboard the wooden, working dive boats that tie up in the Anclote River at the “Sponge
Docks,” less than a mile from the Gulf of Mexico.
(Practice saying the street name. “Dodecanese” is typically pronounced “doh-dek-uh-NEEZ.” It’s a Greek word, referring to the “twelve islands” that constitute the Dodecanese Archipelago in the Aegean Sea near Turkey.)
How the “sponge industry” came to
be in Tarpon Springs is a fascinating story.
A key player was Greek businessman John Michael Cocoris (shown above), who arrived in Tarpon Springs by way of New York City in 1896 to partner with John King Cheyney (shown below) of Philadelphia, Pa. They set their sights on harvesting the sponges that were plentiful just offshore from Tarpon Springs.
Early American sponge fishermen would
typically venture out in small boats. Operating in fairly shallow water, they would
use long poles with hooks at the end to snag and snatch sponges from the ocean
floor.
Cocoris knew a better way. He began recruiting Greek sponge divers by the hundreds from the Dodecanese Islands.
Many came from Kalymnos, which had gained the reputation as “Sponge Divers’ Island.”
(The history of sponge diving in Greece was mentioned in the writings of Homer and Aristotle. Plato referred to sponges as articles commonly used in bathing.)
The Kalymnos divers (sans swim trunks) learned to hold their breath for up to 5 minutes and were capable of reaching depths up to 100 feet.
They used hand-held cutting tools to carefully prune the sponges, allowing the primitive marine invertebrates to regenerate.
By the 1930s, the annual value of the sponge harvest from Tarpon Springs reached approximately $3 million, surpassing competitors like Key West.
Into the 1930s, Cocoris began to outfit his sponge divers with thick rubberized suits with bronze helmets and breastplates. They were connected to air hoses.
The new technology allowed the sponge divers to operate for extended periods of time at depths up to 125 feet.
The first Tarpon Springs diver to wear one of the bulky diver suits (weighing between 170 and 200 pounds) was Demetrios Kavasilos. He descended for 10 minutes and returned with a full bag of high-quality sponges. He exclaimed that the “Gulf beds held enough sponges to supply the world.”
The copper helmet typically weighed between 38-55 pounds, and the breastplate weighed about 18 pounds.
Heavy boots (about 12 pounds each) helped keep the divers upright and stable on the sea floor. Additional lead weight belts or shoulder weights were added to ensure the diver can descend.
Some divers got in trouble when they tried to “extend the limits of the equipment,” which often resulted in them experiencing “decompression illnesses.”
Commercial sponge diving is still practiced in Tarpon Springs, employing professional Scuba divers.
Tourists can view traditional sponge diving demonstrations aboard the excursion boats that operate on the Anclote River.














































