Sunday, January 13, 2008

Our project is reported in the Sentinel
along with a nugget of neighborhood history

The Lake Eola Heights oral-history project gets a mention in the Orlando Sentinel today. Read Florida Flashback here.

The same column also mentions Kena Fries, a resident of Lake Eola Heights who authored a romantic history of Orlando entitled "Orlando in the Long, Long, Ago ... And Now." (You can see the cover -- or even read the whole book -- by clicking on the page listing on the left of the linked page.)

She lived at 1023 E. Livingston St. The house was originally built in 1909 for her father, John Otto Fries, who emigrated to Florida from Sweden in 1871. Fries was Deputy U.S. Surveyor and he served as county surveyor for Orange and Brevard Counties and is credited with making the first copyrighted map of Orange County. In 1900, he took the first census of the Seminole Indians in South Florida.

Read a story about Kena Fries and the Orlando she knew in the Central Florida Episcopalian here. (the article starts on page 8).

Both Kena and John Fries are buried in Greenwood Cemetery.

Friday, January 4, 2008

How our streets got named

Amelia Street* was named for the wife of Charles Henry Munger, who was mayor of Orlando in 1878. He was also one of the owners of the Reporter, which was one of Orlando's first newspapers and eventually became one of the papers that grew into the Orlando Sentinel.

Cathcart Avenue was originally known as Norman Street, for Norman Robinson, State Chemist and Rollins College professor. Read his listing in the General Catalogue of the University of Rochester, 1850-1911, here. The name was changed in 1912. (But who was Cathcart? Anyone know?)

Eola Drive was originally known as East Street because it was the eastern boundary of Jacob Summerlin's land. In 1923, the name was changed to Eola Drive because it formed the eastern border of Lake Eola Park.

Hyer Avenue was named for the pioneer Hyer family.

Livingston Street was named for J.H. Livingston, who in 1880 was one of the group who bought 26 acres for the purpose of creating Greenwood Cemetery. Prior to 1900, the street was commonly spelled 'Livingstone' on maps.

Mills Avenue was named for pioneer real estate agent N.L. Mills.

Robinson Street was named for Samuel Robinson, who engaged in civil engineering and surveying in Florida for 30 years and served as county surveyor for 16 years. He gathered a large collection of gold and silver ornaments from Indian mounds and elsewhere in his travels through Central Florida; that collection now belongs to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Read more about Samuel Robinson here.

Summerlin Avenue was named after Jacob Summerlin, one of Orlando's founders.

A few more street names still need some explanation. Hillcrest might be obvious; it runs along the highest point in the city. But what about Harwood, Concord, Mt. Vernon and Ruth?
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* In 1962, the city decided that all north-south roads would be called avenues, and all east-west roads would be called streets. The only official exception was Central (which was known as Central Avenue), which was called a boulevard. The new rule went into effect on November 1, 1962, to coincide with the new telephone books.

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Take a walk through history


The Lake Eola Historical Trail covers many of the neighborhood's sites of historic and architectural importance, and by following the hike plan you can learn quite a bit about the community.

The 3.3-mile hike starts at the corner of Concord Street and Broadway Avenue.

Get the entire hike plan here. (And check out the rest of Steve Rajtar's 150 trails in Central Florida here.)

Do you have any stories or memories about the sites on this trail? Please share them with your neighbors and post them as a comment.

In the beginning ...



Jacob Summerlin -- reputed to be the first child born in Florida after the land was ceded by Spain -- once owned much of the land that is now Lake Eola Heights. He donated a large tract of land in order for a fine park to be established; that park is still maintained to his orders of it being kept beautiful. His sons named it Lake Eola, after a lady they both knew. In 1875, Orlando became incorporated under Florida law and Jacob Summerlin was the president of the first Orlando City Council.