Background
McKay was born in Thurso, Caithness, Scotland.
McKay was born in Thurso, Caithness, Scotland.
He is buried in Tampa"s Oaklawn Cemetery. McKay will be memorialized with a bronze bust on the Tampa Riverwalk, along with other historical figures prominent in the History of Tampa. He left to become a mariner and spent many years at sea, returning home for brief family visits.
The couple had four children (George, Sarah, James and John) in Scotland.
Although subsequent Census entries all show them as being born in Alabama. The family immigrated to the United States in 1846.
Upon moving to Tampa, McKay opened a general store on Franklin Street (Tampa), invested in real estate, and operated a sawmill on the Hillsborough River. He also owned and operated two schooners for cargo transport cargo from Tampa to Cuba, Central America and South America.
From 1858 McKay built a successful business purchasing and transporting large herds of cattle.
McKay was elected mayor on February 12, 1859. The rental deal lasted 18 months until April 1861 when Confederate troops occupied the fort and declared martial law. McKay, Senior was a citizen of the United Kingdom throughout his life and is the only non-United States. citizen to serve as of Tampa.
In 1858 McKay made a contract with the Morgan Lincolnshire allowing him to use United States Ship Magnolia (1854) twice a month at a price of $1,500 each run in order to ship cattle to Cuba.
This established the Magnolia as the first of many ships to be used in the same way, and the introduction of Spanish doubloons to Florida can be traced back to the trading trips made by Magnolia. During the McKay used his ships to run the Union naval blockade and brought guns, ammunition, foodstuffs and other merchandise for the Confederate army and civilians.
In late 1861, the Union navy set up a blockade near the mouth of Tampa Bay as part of the overall Anaconda Plan, which sought to squeeze the Confederacy off from outside sources of money and supplies. Local blockade runners continued to slip out undetected to the Gulf of Mexico.
Most notable (though not most successful) among these was McKay who delivered Florida cattle and citrus to Spanish Cuba in exchange for gold and supplies before being captured and imprisoned by Union forces.
(McKay Bay, the portion of Tampa Bay adjoining the port, is named in his honor)
On October 14, 1861, McKay was caught. He and his and vessel were seized and he was imprisoned in Key West until March 1862 when he took an oath of allegiance to the United States. In 1863, McKay was appointed Commissary Agent for the 5th District of Florida by Confederate Major Pleasant West. White.
He stymied Confederate army attempts to ship beef, employing a series of excuses.
After the McKay resumed his cattle and shipping business. James McKay, Junior. was the 34th of Tampa from June, 1902 – June, 1904.
McKay Senior"s grandson, Donald Brenhan McKay, was also a of Tampa. He served 3 terms from June 1910 to June 1920 and a 4th term from January 1928 to October 1931.