History
of Yulee
David Levy Yulee was born on the Caribbean island of St.
Thomas, went to school in Virginia, and moved to Florida in
1824, where his father had bought 50,000 acres of land near
Jacksonville. His father, a Moroccan Jew named Moses Elias
Levy, intended to build a homestead for Jewish settlers in
Florida.
Yulee went to law school in St. Augustine and became a
delegate to the U.S. Congress from the Florida territory in
1841. He spearheaded the campaign for Florida's admission as
a state, which occurred in 1845. A Democrat, he became a
U.S. senator that year, and served two terms, 1845–1851 and
1855–1861.
Originally known as David Levy, he changed his name to
include that of an ancestor's, Yulee, in 1846. He was the
first Jewish senator in American history. In 1846 he
converted to Christianity, but that did not halt the
anti-Semitic hostility he endured his entire career.
As senator, Yulee was a great advocate for a Florida
railroad. He also supported slavery and the South's
secession from the Union, and he joined the Confederate
congress during the Civil War. After the Confederacy's
defeat, he was imprisoned for nine months and then pardoned.
He then turned his attention to building a Florida railroad,
and served as president of several Florida railroad
companies. In Florida, the town of Yulee and the county of
Levy are named after him. |
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