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A county park, Fort De Soto Park consists of a string of five small islands
(keys) off the coast of St. Petersburg. The fort for which the park is named was
built during the Spanish-American War in the late 1890's and is open to the public.
The last brickwork fort built in the United States, the fort never saw action and
was turned over to the county for use as a park in the 1940's. The beaches in the
park are enormous, and numerous visitors stroll and sun themselves along their expanse
while feeling totally isolated. North Beach faces the Gulf of Mexico, and East Beach
offers a stunning view of the St. Petersburg Skyway. Massive picnic shelters are
located at both the North Beach and East Beach areas.
The campgrounds at Fort De Soto Park occupy all of St. Christopher Key. The campground offers 235 combination tent and RV sites, some of them bayside. The bayside campsites enjoy a picture-perfect setting of tall, tropical plants and shrubs, offering cooling shade and a perfectly framed window on the bay. The sites are strictly first come, first serve, with no advance reservations.