Orlando, Florida: A Brief History
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About this ebook
James C. Clark
Jim Clark has a PhD in history from the University of Florida and is a lecturer at the University of Central Florida in Orlando. He is a member of the board of advisors at the Orange County Historical Museum. Clark is the author of eight books on various historical topics.
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Orlando, Florida - James C. Clark
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PREFACE AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
For hundreds of millions of people around the world, Orlando is the home of Walt Disney World; Universal Studios Florida; Sea World; and other attractions. Nearby is the Kennedy Space Center, and east or west there are beautiful beaches.
Few know its rich history from the Indian raids of the 1800s, to the era of the cowboy and the cattle drives, to the center of the citrus industry.
In writing this book, I have been able to draw on a lengthy list of people whose research, writings and preservation of Orlando history made this book possible.
There is Dr. Jerrell Shofner, the former chair of the University of Central Florida History Department, who conducted detailed research into local history throughout Florida. It is frightening to think what historical research in Orlando would be without Sara Van Arsdel, the director of the Orange County Regional History Center. Her battle for the regional history center is legendary. Cynthia Cardona Meléndez, the center’s curator, has devoted her career to saving the history of Orlando and, at the same time, provided invaluable assistance to me.
The Orlando Sentinel has an unusual commitment to Orlando history dating to the 1970s. The newspaper has run regular history columns written by a series of writers, including Jim Robison, Mark Andrews and Joy Dickinson, who have developed a following and produced several excellent books of Orlando history.
There are others whose work in Florida history has been vital. David Colburn of the University of Florida, Robert Cassanello of the University of Central Florida and Ben Brotemarkle of the Florida Historical Society have made significant contributions to Florida history.
Jon Findell of the University of Central Florida’s Faculty Media Center was, as always, a great friend and helped make this book possible. Adam Watson of the Florida State Archives provided invaluable assistance as he has done so often in the past. Working with Chad Rhoad and Darcy Mahan at The History Press was truly enjoyable, and I am grateful for their patience.
The Orlando Sentinel and its various predecessors were invaluable reference sources.
I am also grateful for the help of Trish Wingerson, Frank Billingsley, Sandra Varry and Grant Heston for coming to my rescue time after time.
Without these people and resources, this book would not have been possible, and I am grateful.
Chapter 1
THE FIRST SETTLERS
For thousands of years, Florida lay beneath the sea, and as the waters receded, limestone remained. Most of the land was at or near sea level—Orlando is about one hundred feet above sea level. The first inhabitants were camels, bears, wolves and saber-toothed tigers. They fled south to avoid the approaching ice age—the first creatures to come to Florida seeking warmth. North of Orlando archaeologists found the fossils of those animals.
The first humans came to Florida more than ten thousand years ago, long after the prehistoric animals disappeared. They arrived in the Orlando area about nine thousand years ago, settling along Lake Apopka. Archaeologists discovered dugout canoes on the lake banks buried in muck. New arrivals six thousand years ago brought pottery-making skills and planted crops.
When the first European settlers arrived in the 1500s, there were nearly half a million Native Americans in the peninsula including the Apalachee, Tekesta, Calusa, Ai, Acuera and Timucuan tribes. The Timucuan and the Acuera lived closest to Orlando and sold corn to Hernando de Soto in 1539. Some of the Indians died in battles with the Spanish, but the biggest killers were diseases that the Europeans brought and spread to the Indians who had no immunity. The Indians died by the thousands. The original Indian tribes disappeared, replaced by newer arrivals, such as the Seminoles.
The first European to see Orlando was probably Pedro Menendez de Aviles, who landed in St. Augustine in 1565. A year later, he traveled up the St. Johns River and then into the Orlando area, camping at Lake Eola.
Florida remained a Spanish possession until it passed to England as a spoil of the French and Indian War in 1763. The British handed it back to the Spanish in 1783 as a result of the American Revolution. Spain went from a world power to a third-rate power and could no longer control Florida. Indians and others used Florida as a haven to strike into Georgia. Slaves from Georgia escaped into Florida, and pirates used its harbors without fear.
In 1821, facing the threat that the United States would take Florida, Spain agreed to sell it. Florida became a state in 1845, although there were many, like Senator John Randolph of Virginia, who said, No man would immigrate into Florida…a land of swamps, of quagmires, or frogs and alligators and mosquitoes.
No one can say for sure where the name Orlando came from. There are a number of stories, and it may be that the mysterious origins of the name will never be known.
The most popular account is that the city is named for Orlando Reeves, thought to be a hero who gave his life in the wars with the Indians. The United States fought a series of wars with the Seminole Indians in the 1800s, and according to the legend, Orlando Reeves was an army soldier chasing the Seminoles in 1835. One night, the men camped at Lake Eola—originally called Sandy Beach—in what is now downtown Orlando.
Reeves was on patrol when he saw something suspicious in the lake—it looked like a log that had not been there a few minutes earlier. He realized that the log
was an Indian penetrating the camp’s defenses. As he sounded the alarm, an arrow struck and killed him. The soldiers and the Indians fought a battle, and eventually, the Indians faded back into the woods.
After the battle, the soldiers buried Reeves nearby on the banks of Lake Lawsona. He was wrapped in a blanket, and buried beneath a tall pine tree with his name carved on a tree. The carver, identified as a friend, supposedly carved Orlando Reeves,
but all that could be seen in later years was Orlando Re—s.
With the last name impossible to read, the spot became known as Orlando’s grave,
and eventually the city took the name. So strong was the belief in the legend of Orlando Reeves that, in 1939, students at Cherokee Junior High School—located between Lake Eola and Lake Lawsona—placed a stone marker near Lake Eola.
ORLANDO REEVES
In Whose Honor our City of Orlando Was Named
Killed in This Vicinity by Indians September, 1835
"How sleep the brave who sink to rest
By all their country’s wishes blest."
—William Collins
THE CITY BEAUTIFUL
Erected by the students Of Cherokee Junior High School, 1939
With each retelling, the story added detail. In one story, there was one log,
in another many logs.
Reeves became a martyr and his funeral identified as the first Christian burial in what is now Orlando. There were even descriptions: he was tall, lanky, wiry and dark complected, some of a furreigner,
and quick on the trigger.
Supposedly, the tree was cut down years later, despite the pleas of local residents to spare it.
The story is wonderful, but the problem is that it is false. There is no Orlando Reeves on any of the military rolls from the Seminole War, and there is no record of a battle fought near Lake Eola.
A second story identifies a man named Orlando Rees who owned a sugar plantation thirty miles northwest of Orlando. While traveling through the area around Lake Eola, he told friends he had carved his name on a tree, and soon stories began that it was the grave of a soldier. The myth of Orlando Reeves was born.
Naturalist John James Audubon came through in 1832, and wrote that he met Orlando Rees at Spring Garden, about forty miles from Orlando. Rees left Florida after Indians burned his home in 1835. It is entirely possible that Rees, the Indian attack, and the name carved into the tree became mixed up in the retelling and became the soldier Orlando Reeves.
Yet another version claims that a man named Orlando was leading an ox caravan to Tampa when he became ill and died near Lake Eola.
There are two versions associated with Judge James Speer, an early resident of the area. Supposedly, someone named Orlando had once worked for Speer, and the two became close. Speer suggested naming the town for his friend. In another version, Speer was a lover of Shakespeare and especially of the play As You Like with its leading character, Orlando.
Finding a name for the tiny settlement was not a priority for the handful of families who lived in the area. Survival from marauding Indians and carving farms out of the wilderness was foremost on their minds. There were no towns in the area, just forts to protect against the Indians.
All were in sprawling Mosquito County, created in 1824, just three years after Florida became part of the United States. The original county seat was the town of Enterprise, a port city that faded along with the era of steamboats, but at one time was the county seat of Mosquito, Orange and Volusia Counties. Compared to the surrounding area, Enterprise was practically a big city, with a population of about twenty.
In 1840, the county stretched from present-day West Palm Beach to what is now Daytona Beach, 150 miles long and 60 miles wide with just seventy-three hearty souls. The county shrank in 1828, when 1,200 of the 7,000 square miles became a Seminole Indian reservation.
Federal policy toward the Indians changed, and in 1835, Congress passed the Indian Removal Act, ordering all Indians to be moved west of the Mississippi River. The Seminoles refused to go, touching off the first of three wars. Most of the Seminoles were forced west or killed in battle, but a small band refused to leave, moving into the swamps to avoid the soldiers.
The Second Seminole War began in 1835 when the Indians launched surprise raids throughout Central Florida. That brought the army and a new policy. The army established a string of forts thirty miles apart along the St. Johns River and then west to Fort Brooke—today the site of Tampa. The government’s idea was that the forts would be a day’s walk apart. Soldiers on the march could travel from one fort to another and then have the safety of a fort to protect them at night.
The first was Fort Christmas in 1837, followed by Fort Maitland and Fort Gatlin in 1838. Fort Gatlin was named for Dr. Henry Gatlin, an army surgeon who died in an 1835 Indian ambush some fifty miles from Orlando. Soldiers occupied Fort Gatlin for only a few months between late 1838 and mid-1839. A decade later, during the Third Seminole War, it was once again occupied by troops.
In the Orlando area, the number of abandoned and burned-out cabins outnumbered the number of occupied cabins. When the Second Seminole War ended in 1842, the government offered land to settlers under the Armed Occupation Act. Settlers who agreed to live near the forts and become militia soldiers could have free land. Often the soldiers stationed at the forts returned as landowners.
By 1842, most of the Indians were gone, and what is now Orlando was void of people. Andrew Jernigan was one of those who accepted the government’s offer of free land and arrived soon after the war ended. A settlement was named for him. He brought his family, several slaves and seven hundred head of cattle. The slaves were the first in the area. His daughter, Martha, recalled that their nearest neighbors were at Fort Reed, nearly thirty miles away. She wrote, There were plenty of varmints in the woods, such as bears, pumas, wolves, and wildcats.
The threat of Indians was always present. Martha Jernigan said that the family moved into Fort Gatlin—three miles south of Orlando—for nearly a year to escape threatening Indians. Orlando was woods and the deer and turkeys fed all about where the city now stands.
Jernigan opened a post office in his home, and the name Jernigan
was recognized by postal officials. The mail came only twice a month.
Christmas
A postcard from the 1950s featured one of the few buildings in Christmas. Standing in front is Santa Claus with some children. Historical Society of Central Florida, Incorporated.
TODAY, CHRISTMAS IS BEST KNOWN FOR ITS POST OFFICE, sought after by people who want their Christmas cards to carry the postmark Christmas.
It began as a fort, to protect settlers and soldiers from the Seminole Indians.
As December 1837 came to an end, work on a fort east of present-day Orlando was completed. It seemed only natural to name it Fort Christmas, since construction began on December 25.
The fort never saw hostilities, and the soldiers left after they finished the construction. The area remained unsettled for several years until the government began giving away land.
The town never had more than about 1,000 residents, but it did have