Wednesday, March 15, 2023

Sarasota Month: Emeline Dykes

 Sarasota Month: Emeline Dykes Foster


The "Phillippi House" on Sarasota Bay (1847)


Sarasota Month here at Rick’s Blog began by celebrating the amazing life of Bertha Honore, an accomplished Floridian who is better known throughout South Florida as Mrs. Potter Palmer (see also my Blog of March 7, 2023). Many of the bravest of the brave frontierswomen however are rarely mentioned in history books, despite their ability to survive the most difficult of times. These all too often forgotten Florida pioneers are the women I challenge myself to learn of, so I can in turn share these extra-special individuals with my history fans.

SARASOTA MONTH at RICK'S BLOG

Of particular interest to Sarasota’s History Day in the Park celebration should be Miss Emeline Dykes, a Florida native born 27 February 1842 in Citrus County. The fact that Emeline counts among the young female survivors of the 1840s is of itself qualification for special mention, but her place in Sarasota history – or I should say Florida history – deserves more than a sentence or two about her being among those young women who conquered the difficulties of surviving to adulthood in Florida’s wilderness.

Emeline is equally fascinating to me as a Central Florida historian because of her ties to pioneers of my homeplace. Her mother was Frances Blitch, a name that traces as well to the earliest days of Florida’s Fort Gatlin and Pine Castle area south of downtown Orlando. The Blitch family of the pre-Statehood Homosassa region spread throughout Central and South Florida.

Emeline Dykes, as best as we can determine, had married three times. Her second husband was Ephriam Rollin Foster, who she married 10 March 1875. Emeline and Ephriam then had a daughter, born 28 October 1879, at Manatee County. As Sarasota County did not yet exist, genealogy records for Emeline’s daughter have been adjusted by family records to show her place of birth as “Sarasota, Sarasota County.” That adjustment is not disputed in the least.

One month following the marriage of Emeline and Ephriam in 1875, the General Land Office issued a homestead deed to Ephriam R. Foster for 38 acres that is identified as “Lot 1, Section 31, Township 36 South, Range 18 East.” This very parcel appears on the 1847 survey above as Lot 1, the sliver of land fronting Sarasota Bay just above the red arrow added by me.

BOOK LAUNCH AT PHILLIPPI'S ESTATE

To Sarasota, With Love, Orlando

Our Shared Heritage

By Richard Lee Cronin

My red arrow points to a noteworthy structure of early Sarasota history. Surveyors of the 1840s rarely sketched “places of interest” because their work preceded most every homesteader. But in 1847, Deputy Surveyor A. H. Jones noted the existence of the “Phillippi House” on Sarasota Bay. Its location in Lot 2 places the Phillippi House as adjacent to the property deeded to Ephriam and Emeline (Dykes) Foster. (Surveyor Jones identified the Phillippi house of 1847 as being about one-half mile north of Siesta Drive of today.)

Following the death of Ephriam in 1882, Emeline remarried. One of the earliest of pioneer women ever to reside in what is now the town of Sarasota, and after giving birth to seven known Florida pioneers in the 1860s and 1870s, she died in 1913 at the age of 71.

Sarasota Frontierswoman Emeline Dykes was a neighbor to one of the areas first known structures, the Phillippi House. On March 25, 2023, at the Phillippi Estate in Sarasota, History Day in the Park will celebrate this town's history. And I am extremely proud to be part of this splendid celebration. (Note: Phillippi Estate Park is located along the Phillippi Creek and not at the location pinpointed in 1847 by the government surveyors.)

I hope you will stop by my booth and say hello. I invite you to also attend one or more of my 15-minute after each hour presentations at my booth. Here's my schedule for each brief presentation:

Snippets of Florida History

Rick Cronin’s History Booth

Sarasota’s History Day in the Park

Saturday, March 25, 2023

 

Snippets Schedule (Each Talk 10 minutes or less)

A Women’s Month Tribute to Rose (10:15 AM)

Mrs. Joseph H. Lord’s Orlando Ghost (11:15 AM)

Orlando and the Sanibel Lighthouse (12:15 PM)

Would YOU have been as Honorable? (1:15 PM)

What’s with Lake Wailes of Lake Wales? (2:15 PM)

A Women’s Month Tribute to Bertha (3:15 PM)

From Sarasota’s Indian Beach to Orlando (4:15 PM)  

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