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Pine Island Park (also known as Alfred McKethan Park) is a 3-acre (12,000 m 2) area on the Gulf of Mexico at 10800 Pine Island Drive that includes a swimming beach and swimming area, picnic tables, shelters, barbecue grills, observation point, volleyball court, playground and concession stand. [6]
County Road 495 is entirely Pine Island Drive It runs from CR 550 in Bayport to Alfred McKethan/Pine Island Park in Pine Island. The road was once a former segment of SR 595 [1] Though another CR 495 exists in nearby Citrus County, Hernando CR 495 has no connection to that route.
McKethan was born in Brooksville, Florida, October 14, 1908.He was a fifth-generation Floridian. After graduating from Hernando High School in 1926, McKethan attended the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, Virginia for two years, and completed his education at the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida, where he was a member of Sigma Nu Fraternity (Epsilon Zeta Chapter).
Condron Family Ballpark at Alfred A. McKethan Field is the college baseball stadium of the University of Florida, and serves as the home field for the Florida Gators baseball team. Condron Ballpark is located on the university's Gainesville, Florida campus, adjacent to the university's softball stadium, Katie Seashole Pressly Stadium , and its ...
Dorothy Ederington, daughter of Francis Ederington, married John J. Hale, the son of Joseph Hale and one of early pioneers of Hernando County. John and Dorthy Ederington Hale were the grandparents of Alfred A. McKethan. [13] Charlotte Ederington, daughter of Francis Ederington, married Dr. James R. Snow from Georgetown, South Carolina. Dr.
Alfred Greer serves as store manager and has 25 years of service with Publix. He most recently served as a Publix store manager in Pawleys Island. The 46,791 square-foot Publix, located at 136 ...
The courts were connected to Pine Island Sound by canals. Cushing described the Pine Island Canal, leading from Pine Island Sound between two "very high shell elevations" to a court that was lower than the others. From the eastern end of the court, a canal 30 feet (9.1 m) wide and 6 feet (1.8 m) deep ran east into the interior of the island.
Funded by Alfred McKethan, other athletic boosters, and the state government, a $2.4-million concrete stadium was constructed in 1987 to replace the existing bleachers at Perry Field for the 1988 season. The stadium was dedicated in McKethan's honor on February 23, 1988, before a 3-2 victory by the Gators over Miami. Initially seating 3,300 ...