James Evan David
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
James Evan David was a World War I veteran of the U.S. Army Air Service Signal Corps who owned and operated David's Neptune Beach Inn Tourist Camp, a combination gas station and motor court at 416 Atlantic Blvd., from 1934-1953. His son, Staff Sgt. Robert B. David, a 1940 Fletcher High School graduate, was killed in action during World War II.
Images
Newspaper obit from 1953

Located in Section B (Veterans)

Photograph Courtesy of the Beaches Museum

Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
James Evan David was born on Nov. 4, 1898, in Uniontown, Pennsylvania, and served as a private in the 23rd Balloon Company, a unit of the U.S. Army Air Service Signal Corps, from Jan. 7, 1918, to Feb. 4, 1919, including three months overseas. He married Irene Slappey in 1920. From 1928 to 1933, he was employed as a bill poster for Publix Theaters in West Palm Beach. In 1934, David moved his family, including children Bobby and Raybon, to Atlantic Beach, where he and his wife ran a fuel oil business and a 22-unit motel on Atlantic Boulevard. The couple also owned and operated David's Shell Chateau gas station on 1st Street in Jacksonville Beach. At the time of his death on April 9, 1953, David, 54, also owned several cottages on Sherry Drive. In 1954, his widow sold David's motor court to P.E. Carleton, who operated it as the Carleton Motel until at least 1966.
Sources
Woodhouse, Johnny. "Pioneer Paratrooper." The Beaches Leader (Jacksonville Beach) February 7th, 2001. Section B-1.
Florida Times-Union April 13rd, 1953. Page 22.
1930, 1935, 1950 Census records
Florida Times-Union
Johnny Woodhouse
Beaches Museum Archives