Everything about Enterprise Florida totally explained
Enterprise is an
unincorporated community in
Volusia County, in the
U.S. state of
Florida, and its former
county seat. Situated on the northern shore of
Lake Monroe, it's flanked by the cities of
DeBary and
Deltona. Once the terminus of
shipping on the
St. Johns River, Enterprise is now a suburb of
Orlando. It is site of the
Florida United Methodist Children's Home.
History
Early
In 1565,
Pedro Menendez de Aviles explored the St. Johns River, perhaps reaching Lake Monroe, which was called "Valdez" during the
Spanish occupation of Florida. The area was home to the
Mayaca Indians, who lived in small villages. They collected
snails and
shellfish, hunted
turtles,
deer and
alligators, or gathered
roots,
nuts and
berries.
War and
disease would decimate the tribe, which left behind at Enterprise a large shell
midden, described as a
bluff. By the middle of the 18th century, the
Seminole Indians from
Alabama and
Georgia had replaced the Mayaca.
Nineteenth century
Following the acquisition of Florida by the
United States in 1821, the Seminoles had conflicts with settlers and troops throughout the
Seminole Wars. In 1835, they burned
Palatka, a major
port on the St. Johns River, then the major artery into
Central Florida. Consequently, "Fort Kingsbury," a
stockade defense, was built in 1838 at Enterprise, across the lake from "Fort Mellon," built in 1836 at Mellonville (now
Sanford).
To displace the Seminoles, in 1842 the
Armed Occupation Act was passed, granting 160 acres to settlers who would clear, cultivate and hold 5 acres for 5 years. Over 200,000 acres (800 km²) south of Palatka were opened for development. One of more than 1,000 who applied was Cornelius Taylor from San Pablo (now
Mayport), a former timber agent and first cousin to General
Zachary Taylor. In 1841, he and about 20 others founded "Enterprise" at Fort Kingsbury, which had been abandoned after 6 weeks, and filed for homestead the next year.
Taylor built an inn atop the shell midden to attract visitors traveling by shallow-draft
steamboat from Palatka, the furthest upstream ocean-going vessels could navigate.
Orange groves were planted, a
gristmill established, together with a
sawmill to cut
Southern live oak, prized by the
U.S. Navy for
warships. In 1843, Enterprise became county seat of "Mosquito County." It was renamed "Orange County" in 1845, with the county seat moved to Mellonville. An
epidemic, believed to be
smallpox, had claimed his oldest daughter and 9 slaves in 1842, and Taylor left in 1847. He would drown sailing to
California in 1849.
In 1851, Jacob Brock bought land a mile west of the original settlement, where he built a
wharf and laid out streets and lots. A
steamboat captain with "a notable reputation for the lavish and original nature of his profanity," he'd transported to Enterprise many invalids seeking the climate and
sulfur springs believed to be curative. In 1854, he completed The Brock House, a 2 and a half story hotel with accommodations for more than 50. Enterprise became county seat of "Volusia County" that year, and Brock operated the first regular steamboat passenger service from
Jacksonville to Palatka, expanding to Enterprise.
It was a 206 mile trip aboard the
Darlington, which departed Jacksonville at 8:00 AM on Saturday, timed to receive passengers discharged from ocean-going ships. It would arrive and spend Sunday in Palatka, from which it departed at 5:00 AM on Monday morning, docking at Enterprise that evening. Only by daylight did prudent captains navigate the narrow, crooked upper part of the St. Johns River. Crewmembers had to watch for
snakes, slithering aboard out of
Spanish moss in overhanging trees, and also for alligators, shot before they could tangle with the paddlewheel. Soon, an additional danger would imperil the waterway -- the
Civil War.
The
South Atlantic Blockading Squadron division commanded by
Union Captain
George Balch set out to capture Confederate steamboats on the St. Johns River. Seized at Lake Monroe on
March 14,
1864 was the
Hattie Brock, named for the captain's daughter, and loaded with 150 bales of
cotton for export to help finance the rebel cause. It was towed to Brock's wharf to load wood fuel. From the
veranda of The Brock House, the
New York Tribune would report, Miss Brock expressed grief and indignation at the capture of her namesake by the
Yankees. The
marines were reportly glad to get away as soon as their boats were supplied. They took with them 2 black males and 3 black females from their stop in Enterprise, and 2,000 pounds of
sugar from a
refinery, which was then demolished, about 2 miles farther downriver on the east side of DeBary Creek.
Following the rebellion, the state experienced a boom in tourism, and Enterprise became a fashionable resort and sportsmen's paradise for fish and game. "No dreamland on earth," wrote
Harriet Beecher Stowe in 1873, "can be more unearthly in its beauty and glory than the St. Johns in April." Sold and renovated in 1876, The Brock House was then the most famous hotel in the state, with guests including President
Ulysses S. Grant, President
Grover Cleveland, General
William Sherman,
Jay Gould and members of the
Vanderbilt family. Others came from
England,
France and
South America. In 1877, Enterprise was incorporated.
Another notable visitor was (Samuel) Frederick deBary of
New York City, a wealthy importer of
champagne and other
French wines. After staying at The Brock House in 1870, he'd buy 400 acres to the west in 1871 and build "
DeBary Hall," a mansion and hunting lodge. Acquiring much more land, deBary planted orange groves and
pecan trees. In 1876, he established the
DeBary Merchants Line, a steamship company contracted to carry mail from Jacksonville to Enterprise. He contributed money to build the
Gothic Revival All Saints Episcopal Church, completed in 1883. It was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 1974.
The
Atlantic Coast, St. Johns & Indian River Railroad in 1885 linked
Titusville with Enterprise, from which ran a spur line to the
Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West Railroad at Enterprise Junction in present-day DeBary. But in 1888, Florida experienced an epidemic of
yellow fever. The population of Enterprise dwindled, and
Deland became county seat. The freezes of 1894 and 1895 wiped out the citrus industry in much of the state, including the deBary groves. Enterprise voted to de-incorporate in 1895. Its distinctive midden, once featured on the city
seal, would disappear, the shells used to pave streets and sidewalks.
Recent
In 1924, the George E. Turner Power Plant was built near the shore of Lake Monroe. The town was renamed "Benson Springs" in 1927, a change petitioned by the owner, employees and guests of the Benson Springs Hotel. Never popular, the name "Benson Springs" changed back to "Enterprise" in 1937, the year the deteriorating hotel was razed to increase room for the
Florida United Methodist Children's Home. The
Florida East Coast Railway branch was abandoned in the 1950s, its track removed in the 1970s. Dismantling the George E. Turner Power Plant began in 2007, and was completed in February of 2008. Today, Enterprise struggles not to be absorbed by Deltona.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Enterprise Florida'.
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