Venice, resort city, Sarasota county, west-central Florida, U.S. It lies along the Gulf of Mexico, about 20 miles (30 km) south of Sarasota. Originally a fishing village settled in the 1870s, it was later planned (c. 1925) as a retirement city for members of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers; the project was abandoned after the stock market crash of 1929, but Venice survived as a small resort noted for tarpon fishing. Originally called Horse and Chaise for a formation of trees that resembled a horse and buggy, the city was renamed in 1888 by a settler who thought the area resembled the Italian city of Venice. It revived after 1960, when it replaced Sarasota as the winter headquarters for the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus.
Light manufacturing (including windows and doors) augments tourism as the city’s economic mainstay. Venice is a popular retirement area. Nearby is Oscar Scherer State Park, and there is a spa at Warm Mineral Springs, about 10 miles (16 km) east. Venice is known for the prehistoric sharks’ teeth that can be found on its beaches; the annual Sharks Tooth and Seafood Festival is held in August. Inc. 1927. Pop. (2000) 17,764; (2010) 20,748.