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From the rolling
red clay hills of southern Georgia to the blue-green waters of the
Gulf of Mexico, the beauty and fertility of the Apalachee region
have attracted both wildlife and people for many thousands of years.
People began settling the coast
of Apalachee Bay more than 10,000 years ago, traveling inland to
forage and hunt. By the time the first Spanish explorers arrived
in the 1500s, much of the region was devoted to croplands and was
populated by an estimated 25,000 Apalachee Indians. The Spanish,
too, appreciated the areas fertile lands and established 13 missions
between the Apalachicola River and St. Augustine, connected by the
Royal Road (today known as old St. Augustine Road.) By the early
1700s, native populations largely had been driven out, and English
colonists began arriving. The name "Tallahassee," meaning
old fields or abandoned villages, was given to the area surrounding
Lake Jackson.
The 1800s were a boom time. Cotton
was king, and the region was one of the richest cotton producing
areas in the South. Forests provided thousands of acres of timber
and naval stores. The cities of Thomasville and Tallahassee were
founded in the 1820s, and in the next decade roads and railroads
were built to link them with coastal ports and transport increasing
volumes of agricultural and silvicultural products to markets. Florida's
first railroad, the Tallahassee-St. Marks Railroad, was built in
1837 to link the Red Hills with the port on the St. Marks River.
Many of the region's small towns - Metcalf, Merrillville, Chaires,
Lloyd, Sopchoppy, Hilliardville and McIntyre -grew up along railroad
sidings to serve timber companies as they harvested the areas forests.
After the Civil War, the great plantations
of the region were abandoned or divided into small farms. But at
the beginning of the 20th century, northern industrialists bought
plantations throughout the Red Hills area, keeping their acreage
intact to use as winter homes and private hunting reserves. Their
stewardship has allowed much of the area to remain as open forests
with grassy understories, supporting healthy populations of quail.
The St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge was established in 1931,
and the Apalachicola National Forest in 1936, in an attempt to preserve
fast-disappearing forest and wetlands. State and regional efforts
since the beginning of the 1980s have focused on protecting water
resources, especially the region's lakes and rivers.
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Historic buildins
are common sights along the nearly 300 miles of tree-canopied
roads winding through the Apalachee region.
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Population Pressures
Today, much of the Apalachee region
remains as farms, forests, and wetlands. Towering live oaks lining
historic trading routes create a network of canopy roads, one of
the regions most distinctive features. Winding rivers act as natural
pathways for both wildlife and people. But the pressures of population
growth are mounting, especially in the Tallahassee area. Ninety
percent of the region's population growth since 1980 has occurred
in and around Tallahassee, most of it north of 1-10.
And it shows no sign of slowing
down. It's estimated that in the next 15 years, the growth in
Tallahassee and Leon County will be larger
than the current population of any other county in the region. Where
will all these people go? Out -to the suburban developments planned
in the rural areas north, northeast, east and southeast of the city,
and to surrounding counties.
While the political boundaries of
the Apalachee ignore the natural and cultural boundaries of the
area's landscape, they have a tremendous effect on how the landscape
is protected. One of the critical challenges facing the region is
figuring out how to cross political boundaries and work together
to protect the region's distinctive character and way of life.
Cultural/Historical Sites in the Apalchee
Region
Lake Jackson Mounds State Archaeological Site,
Tallahassee
San Luis Archaeological and Historic Site, Tallahassee
DeSoto State Archaeological Site, Tallahassee
San Marcos De Apalache State Historic Site, St. Marks
Natural Bridge State Historic Site, near Woodville
Old Fort Park, Tallahassee
Pebble Hill Plantation, Thomas County
Tallahassee Historic District
Thomasville Historic District
Quincy Historic District
Monticello Historic District
Tallahassee-St. Marks Historic Railroad State Trail
St. Marks Lighthouse, St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge
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