The British named it after King George III. The Spanish rechristened it Calle de San Jorge. When Florida became American territory in 1821, it was translated back into English and has been St. George Street ever since. The southern stretch, below the Plaza de la Constitución, tells a different story from the bustling pedestrian zone to the north. Here, homes grew grander once the threat of attack receded: coquina walls gave way to landscaped lawns, wrap-around porches and elaborate gingerbread trim.
Napoleon's nephew, Prince Murat, boarded at a modest cottage near Bridge Street in 1824, where Ralph Waldo Emerson later stayed as his guest. A few doors up, Henry Flagler was a regular visitor at the Stanbury Cottage, the oldest Carpenter Gothic house in Florida.
VoiceMap's self-guided audio tours trace this architectural evolution, connecting colonial coquina construction to Gilded Age ambition and revealing how each house on the street reflects a different chapter of St. Augustine's shifting allegiances.