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・ First class
・ First class (aviation)
・ First class (computing)
・ First Class (game show)
・ First Class (TV series)
・ First Class 8
・ First Class All the Way
・ First Class Chefs
・ First class constraint
・ First Class CW Operators' Club
・ First class facilities of the RMS Titanic
・ First Class Kloss!
・ First Class Scout (Boy Scouts of America)
・ First Class Thieves
・ First class travel
First Coast
・ First Coast Commuter Rail
・ First Coast High School
・ First Coast News
・ First Coast Railroad
・ First Coconut Grove Schoolhouse
・ First Collier Ministry
・ First Colonial Conference
・ First Colonial High School
・ First Colony
・ First Colony Inn
・ First Colony Life Insurance Company
・ First Colony Mall
・ First Colored Baptist Church
・ First Colored Baptist Church (Memphis, Tennessee)


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First Coast : ウィキペディア英語版
First Coast

Florida's First Coast, or simply the First Coast, is a region of the U.S. state of Florida, located on the Atlantic coast of North Florida. The First Coast roughly comprises the five counties surrounding Jacksonville: Duval, Baker, Clay, Nassau and St. Johns, largely corresponding to the Jacksonville metropolitan area. The term originated in a marketing campaign in the 1980s, and has since emerged as one of Florida's best known vernacular regions. The First Coast refers to the same general area as the "directional" region of Northeast Florida, which may further include Putnam and Flagler counties.
==History==
As its name suggests, the First Coast was the first area of Florida colonized by Europeans, but as with several other of Florida's vernacular regions, a popular identity covering the whole area originated with the tourism industry before being adopted by the community at large.〔Lamme & Oldakowski, pp. 330–331.〕 The concept of the First Coast was developed for the Jacksonville Chamber of Commerce by the William Cook Advertising Agency in 1983. Jacksonville already had other nicknames, but local officials wanted a comprehensive marketing campaign for the entire metropolitan areaDuval, Baker, Clay, Nassau and St. Johns counties – to better promote the region without overshadowing the identities of the particular localities involved. The term "Florida's First Coast" was coined by William Cook staff members Kay Johnson, Bryan Cox, and Bill Jones, and was officially introduced in the "First Coast Anthem" at the 1983 Gator Bowl.
The First Coast is similar to Florida's various other "Coast" regions such as the Space Coast and the Gold Coast that emerged as a result of marketing campaigns.〔 The name refers to both the fact that this is the "first coast" many visitors reach when entering Florida, as well as to the region's history as the first place in the continental United States to see European contact.〔Lamme & Oldakowski, pp. 332–333.〕 Juan Ponce de León may have landed in this region during his first expedition in 1513, and the early French colony of Fort Caroline was founded in present-day Jacksonville in 1563. Significantly, the First Coast includes St. Augustine, the oldest continuously inhabited European-established city in the continental U.S., founded by the Spanish in 1565.〔
A 2007 survey by geographers Ary J. Lamme and Raymond K. Oldakowski notes that the term "First Coast" has superseded two earlier geographical appellations for the region: "Florida's Crown" and "South Georgia", attested in earlier surveys. The former term refers to the area's northern location and the shape of the Georgia border, while the latter emphasizes that the local culture was considered more similar to that of Georgia and the South in general than to the lower Florida peninsula. A conscious push to supplant potentially uncomplimentary connotations may have led to the decline of "South Georgia" in favor of "First Coast"; this coincides with a waning of terms such as "Old South" and "Dixie" in much of the state. The name "First Coast" reinforces the region's connection to the rest of Florida, an important perceptual tie-in for attracting residents, businesses, and tourists.〔
The term "First Coast" became very popular through the 1980s, surprising even its creators. By 2002 nearly 800 organizations and businesses included "First Coast" in their name.〔 Lamme and Oldakowski found that in 2007 18% of Floridians surveyed were familiar with the First Coast, making it one of the best known vernacular regions by Floridians.〔Lamme & Oldakowski, p. 333.〕 In 2013, ''The Florida Times-Union'' noted that the First Coast sometimes extended as far south as Flagler Beach in Flagler County, and that within the area, St. Johns County had begun to brand itself as the "Historic Coast".

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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