The following text was adapted
from _Historic Gainesville, A Tour Guide to the Past_, Ben
Pickard, ed., Historic Gainesville, Inc., Gainesville, FL, 1991,
48 pp. Copyright by Historic Gainesville, Inc.
Once a Timucuan Indian village, the land upon which Gainesville
is situated became part of a Spanish land grant given to Don
Fernando de la Maza Arredondo, a Spanish merchant, in December,
1817.
In 1824, after Florida was annexed to the United States, Alachua
County was created with Newnansville near present-day Alachua as
the county seat. The population expanded with an influx of
planters and farmers as Florida achieved statehood in 1845. When
the proposed Florida Railroad linking Fernandina and Cedar Key
bypassed Newnansville, Alachua County residents voted to create
a new town on the railroad line and make it the county seat.
Gainesville, named in honor of Seminole Indian War General
Edmund P. Gaines, was founded on September 6, 1853.
The following month Major James B. Bailey, a cotton plantation
owner and former County Treasurer, sold over sixty acres of his
land to be used for this new city. His own house, begun in 1848
and completed in 1854 by slave labor, was built of lumber cut
from Bailey's land and dressed in a sawmill on Hogtown Creek. As
the oldest remaining house in Gainesville, this frame vernacular
residence reflects the characteristics typical of mid-nineteenth
century plantation buildings. Restored in the early 1980's, it
is now a rest home for the elderly.
The original city plat followed a traditional gridiron design;
placed in dry and high land, the city covered approximately
eight blocks surrounding a courthouse square. The first
courthouse, a two-story wooden structure, and the first school
were built in 1856, and the first passenger train arrived on
April 21, 1859. By 1860 the town's population had reached 269
and the downtown included a general store and three hotels.
The civil War slowed this development as the town became the
site of a Confederate storehouse. Two encounters with Federal
troops occurred here: the first, a skirmish on February 15,
1864, and the second, a battle on August 17, 1864. At this
battle near the square, Captain Jonathan J. Dickinson and the
Second Florida Cavalry routed the Union forces. Nearly all the
attackers were either killed or captured. Many townspeople
viewed the fighting from the windows of the Beville house near
downtown.
After the war, education thrived as Gainesville Academy, the
town's first school, combined with Ocala's East Florida Seminary
in 1866. The first black school, the Union Academy, opened its
doors in 1867. On April 14, 1869, Gainesville was incorporated,
making that date its official birthday.
During the reconstruction period Colonel Henry F. Dutton, a
Union veteran, made Gainesville one of the largest cotton
shipping stations in the state and also established a successful
bank. By 1882 the city's population reached nearly 2000 and
Dutton had fourteen cotton gins in operation. Two other railways
serviced Gainesville in the 1880's and citrus and vegetable
farming became staples for the local economy. By the 1890's
phosphate and lumbering assumed greater significance for the
economy when the record-setting freezes of that decade destroyed
the citrus industry in northern Florida.
A series of fires in 1884 burned many of the wooden buildings
around the square. In 1885 a magnificent new red brick
courthouse replaced the old wooden one and large, comfortable
residences for the local merchants and professionals were built
around the downtown area. Public improvements followed: gas
became available in 1887, a public water system in 1891,
telephones and electricity arrived in the late 1890;s and a
sewer system was established in 1907. by 1913 the downtown
streets of the city were bricked over. Original Gainesville
expanded to include newer subdivisions, and it became the fourth
largest city in Florida in the early 1900's with a population of
nearly 4000.
The Northeast especially became an elite residential
neighborhood. From 1909 to 1950 four University of Florida
presidents had homes here, making the Northeast a center for
social and intellectual life in the town. In 1910 William Reuben
Thomas moved into Gainesville's most elaborate private
residence, the "Sunkist Villa", situated near Sweetwater Branch.
The surrounding areas continued to develop in the 1920's with
the building of the Thomas Hotel and the establishment of the
Highlands and Duck Pond area. The city's growth was not confined
to the white community alone. Freedmen settled primarily in the
western half of the Brush Addition to Gainesville (the Pleasant
Street area) and in the Olivia A. Porter's subdivision in the
southwest. Many of these early settlers came from South Carolina
and were skilled tradesmen, preachers, and teachers. The
neighborhoods they inhabited still remain important historic and
architectural resources. The concentration of folk housing there
represents a uniquely preserved example of the social, economic,
and cultural traditions of Gainesville's black community.
The city's growth and prosperity continued in 1906 when the
University of Florida began operations on land west of the city.
By 1920 the city's population soared to over 10,000. The
university's emergence as an important economic factor in the
community helped the city to survive the collapse of the local
cotton and phosphate industries during World War I. Throughout
the 1920's and 1930'a new neighborhoods like College Park,
Hibiscus Park, and Golf View developed around the University and
drew the city westward. Following World War II the University
greatly expanded, as population growth continued in the
northwest and southwest areas, away from downtown. Trees and
landscaped medians were sacrificed for traffic lanes, while
large homes near downtown like the Colclough and Baird mansions
were destroyed and supplanted by law offices, banks, and parking
lots. The beautiful of Courthouse was razed in 1960 to make way
for the present building and a decade later the original library
and city hall also suffered the same fate.
Though much was lost, green spaces, large rights of way, planted
medians and fine Victorian and Colonial Revival mansions
remained. By the early 1970's newer residents responded to the
charms of the older residential areas and fought to preserve
these neighborhoods. Their efforts succeeded in creating an
historic district around the downtown center and spurred the
city's willingness to sponsor and financially support
significant restoration projects like the Thomas Center (former
Thomas Hotel), the Hippodrome (former post office), and the
Seagle Building. Thus Gainesville's rich history and cultural
past will remain for future generations to enjoy. |
|