Tuesday, November 29, 2016

MARY Catherine of PALATKA

MARY Catherine influenced her State’s 19th century history not only from her PALATKA home, but in ST AUGUSTINE and ORLANDO as well. At the risk of repeating myself, I’ll say again, excluding women from the amazing story of Florida’s founding risks telling an incomplete history of the 27th State. Mary Catherine of PALATKA is merely one example.

Robert R. & Mary C. REID residence, Palatka, Florida

104 distinct ORLANDO 1880s deeds, for example, were not official until after MARY C of Palatka had affixed her signature. And while history did record her husband failing in 1850 to develop PALATKA, historians neglected to mention the town venture ultimately prospered thanks to MARY Catherine’s brother-in-law, Henry R. TEASDALE. Mary C’s family clearly played an important role in the story of early Florida.

Signature of 1880 ORLANDO, Florida deed for land sale

Born 1825, Mary C was a native of America’s oldest city and a daughter of St. Augustine merchant Pedro J. L. BENET. Of Spanish descent, the Benet family was mentioned in an 1895 journal as “respected St. Augustine citizens.” Mary Catherine BENET married on the 22nd of February, 1850, to Robert R. REID III. Born at Augusta, Georgia, Reid was the son of Florida’s Territorial Governor, Robert R. Reid II, who had died while in Tallahassee in 1841 of Yellow Fever.

Robert & Mary Catherine (BENET) REID relocated the year of their marriage, settling 30 miles west of St. Augustine at a wilderness trading post on the St. Johns River.
Said to mean “crossing over,” PALATKA was a remote community of fewer than 500 in 1850. Despite losing $5,000 in developing the town, the Reid’s made Palatka a permanent home. All seven of their known children were born at Palatka.

After going bankrupt, Robert R. Reid III started over, entering a partnership with Henry R. TEASDALE, husband of Estanislada BENET, Mary Catherine’s younger sister. The new business, Merchants Teasdale & Reid, flourished, and became an important player in the story 19th century Palatka.

As Florida struggled to rebuild during the wake of America’s Civil War, Teasdale & Reid, in 1867, acquired 120 remote acres well to the south of Palatka. The successful bid of $900 was made to the Orange County Sheriff on the courthouse steps at Orlando. The acreage itself surrounded the tiny log cabin courthouse.

Their investment in Village of Orlando sat idle for the next 13 years before Robert & Mary Catherine (Benet) Reid, “of Palatka, Putnam County, Florida,” platted 80 of the 120 acres in 1880 as an addition to the four (4) acre village of ORLANDO.

The first train to Orlando arrived November 11, 1880, stopping at a depot built on acreage donated by, “Robert R. Reid, and MARY C. REID his wife.” The Reid’s sold 103 parcels, with each and every deed being signed by both Robert and Mary C Reid.

On the 29th of October, 1889, Mary Catherine (BENET) REID died at her Palatka home.


The role of women in history is not easily found, but it’s a challenge gladly undertaken by the author of CitrusLAND books. The true-life American story, including the story of Florida, can only be told through the lineal descendants of the earliest pioneers, men and women alike. Each of twelve chapters in my CitrusLAND: Curse of Florida’s Paradise, Second Edition, begins with a dedication to and brief biography of a central Florida Frontierswoman. In addition, the Reid family’s involvement in the development of Orlando is detailed in my First Road to Orlando.

Telling the story of Florida through its people, CitrusLAND is described in detail at my website: www.croninbooks.com

CitrusLAND books are available at BOOKMARKIT ORLANDO bookstores; Winter Garden Heritage Foundation, and Central Florida Railroad Museum in Winter Garden, FL.

Also available at Amazon.com and the Kindle Store
Visit also my Goodreads Group, “Florida History”

Ricks Blog resumes December 14, 2016

Part 8: Gertrude of Sanford

Tuesday, November 15, 2016

CATHERINE of Tallahassee

Catherine WILLIS married a Prince! Not at all a storybook tale, her true-life July 12, 1826 Tallahassee wedding was the start of an extraordinary new chapter in Florida’s history.

Catherine’s Tallahassee marriage was to Prince Charles Napoleon Achilles MURAT, son of the King of Naples. Their wedding created an American nobility in Florida’s panhandle, two decades before the US Territory became a State.

Princess Catherine (WILLIS) Murat

Following the French revolt of 1830, the Murat’s travelled to Europe, stopping in London to pay a visit to Lord Dudley STUART. An English politician, Stuart had married Princess Christine, the daughter of Napoleon Bonaparte, in 1824. The two Christine’s shared a Napoleon heritage, and at a lavish gathering, given in honor of the Murat’s, Lady Stuart introduced her guest as, Catherine MURAT, “the niece of George Washington.”

At another London event, while viewing side by side photos of Napoleon and Washington at an art gallery, their host exclaimed, “Behold, in the Princess MURAT, the niece of both, a distinction which she alone can claim.” Catherine MURAT was indeed a niece of George Washington.

Princess Catherine Murat was the daughter of Colonel Byrd and Mary (Lewis) WILLIS of Tallahassee. The Willis family history speaks highly of their esteemed Princess, telling of Catherine’s journey to England, and stating she had returned home in advance of her husband, doing so, “under the protection of Mrs. PRINGLE, of South Carolina, a good American.”

Mrs. Pringle? The brother of Judith (MAYRANT) Pringle had died in 1757, leaving a four year old son. Judith raised her brother’s boy, John Mayrant, Jr. Years later, John Junior married Maria P. REES, a sister of Orlando Savage REES, a South Carolina Plantation owner and 1830s landowner of Florida’s Spring Garden Plantation in present day Volusia County. Catherine’s was a family rich in Florida history.

Florida’s pioneering family lines of Catherine (Willis) Murat run deep. Catherine’s father was appointed Pensacola Navy Agent, arriving in Florida Territory about the same time as the RANDOLPH family. A son, Lewis Willis, became a doctor, marrying first Harriet RANDOLPH, and second, Hester SAVAGE, as in the family of Orlando Savage Rees.

Catherine (Willis) Murat remained a prominent Tallahassee figure following the death of her husband in 1847. An 1858 Mount Vernon Ladies Association publication appointed her as Vice-Regent of the Florida Chapter, stating: “It may be interesting to know that this lady is the widow of Achilles Murat, son of the celebrated Marshal Joachim Murat, and brother-in-law of the first Emperor of France. She is also grand-niece of Washington, through the family of LEWIS.”

Mount Vernon Ladies Association rescued the original homestead of George Washington, and remains active in that cause to this very day.

“I walk along Tallahassee’s City of the Dead,” wrote traveler C. Vickerstaff Hine in 1891, writing of visiting the town’s Old City Cemetery. “At length, through the wicket-gate, I pass and am among memories of the past. Humble are many of these crumbling records. Others, obelisks of granite, tell of lives spent in marble halls, of life and social gayety. On one of these I read the inscription, “Prince Murat, King of Naples. The lofty monument to this fallen great one tells me that he lies beneath my feet. Near to this monument is another monument, a little lower than the first, as if, even in death, showing wifely submission. It is the monument that marks the last resting-place of the wife of Prince Murat, of the King of Naples, and appropriately, this monument marks the grave of a daughter of the Republic, born, as the inscription tells me, in the Old Dominion.”

Catherine (Willis) Murat resided at PARTHENOPE, the Murat Plantation in Tallahassee that she and her Prince established in 1823. Like that of the short-lived Greek colony of the same name in Prince Murat’s hometown of Naples, for which their Florida plantation had been named, Murat’s plantation too was short-lived. America’s Civil War ended the reign of Florida plantations. With the passing of her home, Catherine of Tallahassee died, and she was laid to rest in 1867, alongside her Prince.

The role of women in history is not easily found, but it’s a challenge gladly undertaken by the author of CitrusLAND books. The true-life American story, including the story of Florida, can only be told through the lineal descendants of the earliest pioneers, men and women alike. Each of twelve chapters in my CitrusLAND: Curse of Florida’s Paradise, Second Edition, begins with a dedication and brief biography of a central Florida Frontierswoman.
Telling the story of Florida through its people, CitrusLAND is described in detail at my website: www.croninbooks.com

CitrusLAND books are available at BOOKMARKIT ORLANDO bookstores; Winter Garden Heritage Foundation, and Central Florida Railroad Museum in Winter Garden, FL.

Also available at Amazon.com and the Kindle Store

Join my Goodreads Group: “Florida History” – It’s FREE!

Ricks Blog resumes November 30, 2016


Part 7: Mary of Palatka

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

FRANCIE MABEL of Sarasota & Venice

Part 5: FRANCIE M of Sarasota & Venice
FLORIDA'S FORGOTTEN FGRONTIERSWOMEN

Sarasota historians fondly recall pioneer Joseph H. Lord. He is remembered as a major Sarasota County landowner and town developer. The Sarasota County History Center says Lord owned, by 1904, four corners of their town’s historic Five Points intersection. Lord reportedly built First Bank and Trust Company, Sarasota’s first ever ‘skyscraper,’ and eventually owned 70,000 acres throughout Sarasota County. Said to have first visited Sarasota in 1890, little of the man’s pre-Gulf Coast story has been recorded prior to now.

Three years before visiting Sarasota, Attorney Joseph H. Lord, in 1887, was an attorney residing near Lake Ivanhoe in Orlando. Certainly worthy of credit for his many Florida development accomplishments, to fully appreciate the Maine native one must also learn of the remarkable woman behind the Sarasota developer. Mrs. Lord, it turns out, was already selling Florida real estate when she married Joseph. As single gal in central Florida, Francie Mabel Webber resided on a parcel platted by her father.

Frank R. and Sarah O. Webber, parents of Francie, began acquiring Orange County property in 1884. Within a year, at age 22, their daughter Francie was also investing in land, nearly 50 acres to be exact. Her parcels were scattered throughout the county.


1886 Survey of Orlando & Winter Park Railway
South shore of Lake Ivanhoe, west of Lake Highland
 

In 1886, a survey for the Orlando & Winter Park Railway (see photo) showed adjoining lots in FAIR OAKS subdivision north of the city of Orlando. One lot was owned by Mrs. F. W. Lord (circled in red), while the adjacent lot owned by her parents, Frank & Sarah Webber (also circled in red). Francie Mabel Webber had married at the time of the 1886 railroad plat, and she then took the name Francie Webber Lord.

Francie, daughter of Frank R. and Sarah O. Webber, had been born at St. Albans, Maine August 28, 1862. She married Joseph Lord August 22, 1885. Joseph, born December 8, 1859, was a native of Wells, York County, Maine.

Francie’s parents had become Florida snowbirds. Her father started buying Orange County property in 1884. Orange County Gazetteer of 1887 listed Frank Webber as an Orange Grower, and identified Joseph Lord as an Attorney, residing at Lake Ivanhoe. Frank R. Webber platted his land on the south shore of Lake Ivanhoe as a subdivision, naming the 1886 community, FAIR OAKS.

Then came Florida’s freeze in the winter of 1894-95. Like most every Orange County resident, the Lord’s lost their land. The final land sale by Mrs. Lord was recorded in late 1893. Francie’s mother, Widow Sarah Webber, relocated with her daughter and son-in-law further south, to the Sarasota-Bradenton area, arriving in 1897. A son, Joseph H. Lord, Jr., was born in the Sarasota region September 1, 1898.

Francie Mabel (Webber) Lord had participated in central Florida’s development in the mid-1880s and early 1890s. Following a devastating freeze in1895, her family moved further south, where her Attorney husband evolved as a major developer during the first days of Sarasota County.

By 1912, the Lord’s had become snowbirds as well. By then residents of Evanston, ILL, headquarters of the Sarasota-Venice Land Company, a company Joseph H. Lord managed, the Lord’s maintained homes in Florida and Illinois.

Francie (Webber) Lord died at Chicago, on the 9th day of April, 1936. Joseph died eight months later, December 24, 1936. Both were buried at Manasota Memorial Park in Bradenton.

Grave marker at Manasota Memorial Park, Bradenton, FL

Florida history remembers Joseph H. Lord, but fact is, the Lord’s work in Florida, (pun intended) should really be remembered as a husband/wife team effort.

The role of women in history is not easily found, but it’s a challenge gladly undertaken by the author of CitrusLAND books. The true-life American story, including the story of Florida, can only be told through the lineal descendants of the earliest pioneers, men and women alike. Each of twelve chapters in my CitrusLAND: Curse of Florida’s Paradise, Second Edition, begins with a dedication and brief biography of a central Florida Frontierswoman. The people of Florida are an important and integral part of all my Florida books.

Telling the story of Florida through its people, CitrusLAND is described in detail at my website: www.croninbooks.com

CitrusLAND books are available at BOOKMARKIT ORLANDO bookstores; Winter Garden Heritage Foundation, and Central Florida Railroad Museum in Winter Garden, FL.

Also available at Amazon.com and the Kindle Store

Join my Goodreads Group: “Florida History” – It’s FREE!

Ricks Blog resumes November 16, 2016


Part 6: Catherine of Tallahassee

References available upon request to Rick@CroninBooks.com