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Created page with "Poet Laureate of Northwest Florida is an honorary title awarded by West Florida Literary Federation, Inc. of Pensacola, Florida, dating back to 1986. The honor, originally nam..."
Poet Laureate of Northwest Florida is an honorary title awarded by West Florida Literary Federation, Inc. of Pensacola, Florida, dating back to 1986. The honor, originally named Poet Laureate of the West Florida Panhandle, was first held by Adelia Rosasco-Soule. She was named by twelve community groups in the process of forming a coalition dedicated to area writers, literary arts, and the preservation of the Panhandle’s literary heritage. Her appointment was heralded with a resolution proclaimed by the Mayors of Pensacola and Milton, and the Chairmen of the County Commissions of Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties. Rosasco-Soule, an 85-year-old writer, world traveler and native of Italy, was working on her fourth book at the time.
Three years later on September 20, 1989, the coalition which became West Florida Literary Federation, Inc, named the second honoree Leonard A. Temme, PhD, a research physiologist with Naval Aerospace Medical Research Lab. He was named with the revised title Poet Laureate of West Florida. At the ceremony, the symbol of the office of poet laureate, a silver and beribboned medallion, was unveiled for the first time. Pensacola jeweler Rock Hard, also a poet, designed and created the medallion which was to be housed in the new Literary Arts Center (now Pensacola Cultural Center) with smaller versions presented to Rosasco-Soule and Temme.
The third poet laureate, Mary Hood, PhD, a professor of microbiology at University of West Florida, was installed in October 1992. The Director of the Creative Writing Program and Associate Professor of English at University of West Florida, Laurie O’Brien, PhD, was named the fourth poet laureate in 1995. On February 7, 2003 the fifth Poet Laureate of Northwest Florida, Henry Langhorne II, MD, a Pensacola cardiologist, was introduced by WFLF President Margret Hildreth at The Garden Center in Pensacola. The evening’s events included Langhorne reading from his collection ''Winter Clothes'', a book signing and social hour.
Juliet Z. DeMarko, MA, was appointed interim poet laureate in February 2009. On April 12, 2011 “Julie” was named as the sixth official Poet Laureate of Northwest Florida. A former restaurateur, chef and author of two memoir cookbooks , DeMarko’s first book of poetry, ''Blue Ridge Childhood'', appeared in 2011. DeMarko’s term ended in March 2014.
Traditionally, at least one collection of work by the poet laureate is published by West Florida Literary Federation, beginning with Rosasco-Soule’s ''Panhandle Memories: A Lived History'' in 1987. In 1990, the Federation published Songs of Passion: Selected Poems, 1985-1989, the works of Temme. Mary A. Hood’s ''Opatoula'' was published by WFLF in July, 1993. In March 1996, the Federation published ''Our Own Sweet Time'' by O’Brien. Langhorne’s ''Tombigbee'' was published in 1999, followed by Listen to the River in 2001. DeMarko’s ''Fashioned by Memory'' published in 2014 by WFLF.
Jamey Jones, the seventh poet laureate, is a college instructor at Pensacola State College and author of ''Blue Rain Morning''. He was named poet laureate in a process that took nearly a year.
Three years later on September 20, 1989, the coalition which became West Florida Literary Federation, Inc, named the second honoree Leonard A. Temme, PhD, a research physiologist with Naval Aerospace Medical Research Lab. He was named with the revised title Poet Laureate of West Florida. At the ceremony, the symbol of the office of poet laureate, a silver and beribboned medallion, was unveiled for the first time. Pensacola jeweler Rock Hard, also a poet, designed and created the medallion which was to be housed in the new Literary Arts Center (now Pensacola Cultural Center) with smaller versions presented to Rosasco-Soule and Temme.
The third poet laureate, Mary Hood, PhD, a professor of microbiology at University of West Florida, was installed in October 1992. The Director of the Creative Writing Program and Associate Professor of English at University of West Florida, Laurie O’Brien, PhD, was named the fourth poet laureate in 1995. On February 7, 2003 the fifth Poet Laureate of Northwest Florida, Henry Langhorne II, MD, a Pensacola cardiologist, was introduced by WFLF President Margret Hildreth at The Garden Center in Pensacola. The evening’s events included Langhorne reading from his collection ''Winter Clothes'', a book signing and social hour.
Juliet Z. DeMarko, MA, was appointed interim poet laureate in February 2009. On April 12, 2011 “Julie” was named as the sixth official Poet Laureate of Northwest Florida. A former restaurateur, chef and author of two memoir cookbooks , DeMarko’s first book of poetry, ''Blue Ridge Childhood'', appeared in 2011. DeMarko’s term ended in March 2014.
Traditionally, at least one collection of work by the poet laureate is published by West Florida Literary Federation, beginning with Rosasco-Soule’s ''Panhandle Memories: A Lived History'' in 1987. In 1990, the Federation published Songs of Passion: Selected Poems, 1985-1989, the works of Temme. Mary A. Hood’s ''Opatoula'' was published by WFLF in July, 1993. In March 1996, the Federation published ''Our Own Sweet Time'' by O’Brien. Langhorne’s ''Tombigbee'' was published in 1999, followed by Listen to the River in 2001. DeMarko’s ''Fashioned by Memory'' published in 2014 by WFLF.
Jamey Jones, the seventh poet laureate, is a college instructor at Pensacola State College and author of ''Blue Rain Morning''. He was named poet laureate in a process that took nearly a year.