Seminole Genealogy and History Project

On July 21, 1821, there were two counties that formed Florida: Escambia to the west and St. Johns to the east. In 1824, the area to the south of St. Johns County became Mosquito County, and Enterprise was named the County Seat. This large county was renamed Orange County in 1845 when Florida became a state. For the next 70 years, Orange County would split into numerous other counties. Seminole County was one of the last counties to emerge from Orange County.

Seminole County was created on April 25, 1913 out of part of the northern portion of Orange County by the Florida Legislature. It was named for the Seminole tribe of Indians. The name “Seminole” is thought to be derived from the Spanish word cimarron,meaning “wild” or “runaway.”

Today I ran across this newly built site, named as above, the Seminole Genealogy and History Project.  There is a section of the site devoted to Ephemera, although at the moment it does not appear to have much content. The picture on the left is described as postcard from Lake Monroe, Florida and was apparently published in a Portland, Maine magazine.  The year is unknown.  While the item does not reside in the Seminole County archives, it does belong to the Florida Photographic Collection.

The jury is out as far as I am concerned.. as to the future success of the Seminole Genealogy and History Project… especially when I notice that most recent update was on May 11th, 2010 and the one prior to that was Aug 10, 2009.  In any event, I’ll be keeping an eye on it to see if anything interesting pops up… and if it does, I’ll be sure to let you know.

I’m Tom Murphy and thanks for helping me give Ephemera the Encore it deserves.

Have a look at my eBay Ephemera store
or have a look at my eBay Auction site

Technorati tags: Encore Ephemera, Ephemera, Ephemera Network

The Fountain of Youth

I’ve written about this blogger before.. and I continue to follow his posts.

Rick is a graphic designer hailing from a bit north of me in the Sunshine State – Orlando, Florida.  He continues to blog about  exactly what his blog header says – “Musings from the State I’m in…”

Most recently he wrote about some great Ephemera he found at a local Antique Fair… the “Renningers World Famous Antiques & Collectors Extravaganzas, Antiques Markets & Farmers Markets” – wow what a title.

The Fountain of Youth

He attended Renningers Mt.Dora Fair and found some interesting Florida related brochures.  This is the one that caught my eye and inspired this blog reference.  It refers to the Ancient Indian Village and Rural Burial Grounds in St. Augustine, Florida.

St. Augustine is a Florida city that dates way back to 1565. It has the distinction of being the oldest continuously occupied European established city, and the oldest port, in the continental United States. The earliest Indian reference I can find to St. Augustine dates back to the Alachua band of the Seminole Indian tribe. The Seminoles are a Native American tribe originally from Florida, who now reside primarily here and in Oklahoma. They have sovereignty over their tribal lands and an economy based on tobacco sales, tourism, gambling and entertainment.

The reference to the “Fountain of Youth” leads back to a popular legend, unlikely to be true, that Juan Ponce de León discovered Florida while searching for the Fountain.

Ricks newly acquired brochure has a great map which includes some familiar Florida favorites like Cypress Gardens, the Bok Tower and the Japanese Gardens in Clearwater.

If you live in Florida as I do … or have an interest in Ephemera from the Sunshine State… as I also do, Rick’s “Visual Ephemera” is a must visit. Thru Ricks Blog I have also found these interesting Florida related blogs:

Enough from me on this wonderful Thanksgiving Day… time for you to do some surfing.. and visit some of these interesting sites.

I’m Tom Murphy and thanks for helping me give Ephemera the Encore it deserves.

Tom
Have a look at my eBay Ephemera site
or have a look at my eBay Auction sites

Technorati tags: Encore Ephemera, Ephemera, Visual Ephemera, Florida

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Site last updated December 11, 2011