DeLand
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About this ebook
Nestled between the St. Johns River and the Atlantic Ocean, Deland, Florida has a history all its own. Perfect for fans of Florida history.
When Henry A. DeLand sat down to plan a town in the summer of 1876, he envisioned a place that would become a religious, educational, business, and social center--the Athens of Florida.
Deland made his dream a reality by investing his livelihood in the town that would be named for him. He donated the land for the first municipal building that doubled as a church and school and funded the school that would become Stetson University. Ever since, the city of DeLand has had an interesting and rich history. Much of this unique history has been captured and preserved in postcards published throughout the past hundred-plus years.
Author L. Thomas "Tom" Roberts is a past president and historian of the year of the West Volusia Historical Society. The majority of the imagery used for this book comes courtesy of Jim Cara, owner of the most complete collection of DeLand postcards in existence.
L. Thomas Roberts
L. Thomas "Tom" Roberts is a past president and historian of the year of the West Volusia Historical Society. He has lived in DeLand since attending Stetson University from 1983 to 1987. The majority of the imagery used for this book comes courtesy of Jim Cara, owner of the most complete collection of DeLand postcards in existence.
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DeLand - L. Thomas Roberts
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INTRODUCTION
In the spring of 1876, Henry Addison DeLand, a baking soda or saleratus manufacturer from Fairport, New York, was invited by his brother-in-law Oliver P. Terry to visit his homestead in Central Florida. It had only been 22 years since Volusia County was carved out of Orange County by the Florida legislature. Enterprise was the county seat, and the town that would become DeLand’s namesake was a sparsely populated area known as Persimmon Hollow. But all of that would soon change when Henry DeLand came to town.
Although he only spent one day in the area, he was so impressed with the wide-open pinelands and potential that he spent the summer planning a city in the pine forest. This was not to be any ordinary town. As Athens was the European center for the arts, learning, and philosophy, Henry DeLand envisioned a town that would become a religious, educational, business, and social center
—the Athens of Florida, as it was later nicknamed. He returned to DeLand in October 1876, and in December of the same year, he called on the settlers of the surrounding area to attend a second meeting at the Rich cabin. Here, he outlined his plan and offered an acre of land for building a combination school and church and funding for half the construction cost. He also offered to donate a 60-foot-wide strip of land extending one mile to the north from New York Avenue to be cleared for a road, planted with trees, and named Woodland Boulevard. During this same meeting, the settlers voted to name the new community DeLand for its architect and founder.
Over the next two years, Henry DeLand wintered in DeLand but sold his interests in the DeLand Chemical Company to move to DeLand full time because the town was not progressing as fast as he desired. He built a home on the 100 block of West Michigan Avenue and began to fully invest his time and money advertising the attributes of the city. This civic mindedness fell in line with his conviction that he would use any wealth he accumulated for benevolent purposes. By matching funds raised by the townspeople, DeLand was able to build the first school, the first church, DeLand Landing, and the DeLand Academy.
The first-year classes of DeLand Academy were held at First Baptist Church. The first building, DeLand Hall, was built in 1884 on the four-acre campus. When college-level classes were added, the school was renamed DeLand College, and in 1887, the Florida legislature chartered the school as DeLand University. While Henry DeLand supported the school, he used his business and church connections to bring teachers, other investors, and philanthropists to DeLand, the most notable being John B. Stetson. From the time John Stetson came to DeLand in 1886, he took an interest in the school and donated the first $1,000 toward the cost of building a sorely needed residence hall, the second building on campus, which was named in his honor. In May 1889, Henry DeLand requested that the name of the school be changed to John B. Stetson University, and from this point on, the history of DeLand and Stetson University has been intertwined.
The time and effort Henry DeLand invested in his town paid off. DeLand incorporated March 11, 1882, and adopted a seal with a Latin cross, anchor, and heart, reflecting the Christian values of faith, hope, and charity that were so dear to its founders. It became the first city in Florida and one of the first in the nation to have electricity when the town council approved an ordinance in 1887, approving the construction and maintenance of an electric lighting plant in the city. The plant would be known as the DeLand Electric Light, Power and Ice Company, or DELPICO, and was owned in part by John Stetson, a friend of Thomas Edison. On March 29, 1888, an election was held to determine whether the county seat would remain in Enterprise. DeLand received 1,003 votes, a majority margin of 142 votes. The two factors believed to have influenced the vote were that Henry DeLand agreed to donate the site for the courthouse and he, John Stetson, and Fred Goodrich gave the county commissioners a $15,000 bond covering the cost of the construction if the county seat was legally relocated to DeLand. The move brought new jobs, business, and prestige to the rapidly thriving community.
In 1900, Stetson University opened the first law school in Florida, bringing some of the brightest minds and future leaders to DeLand. The first law professor, Carey D. Landis, would be one of the cornerstones of the Courthouse Ring, or simply the Ring, along with his student Bert Fish, a member of the first graduating law class. The Ring would wield political power and influence not only in Volusia County but also throughout the Florida political landscape, helping men get elected at local, county, and state levels. Landis would serve as attorney general under political rival and fellow Volusian Gov. David Sholtz, and was in a position to run for governor before his untimely death in 1938. Fish ran the Florida Democratic campaign for Franklin Roosevelt in 1932 and was rewarded by Roosevelt when he was appointed ambassador of Egypt and Saudi Arabia. His friendship with the Saudi king was instrumental in the American Oil Company’s getting the contract to drill for oil in that country.
To this day, Deland continues to be a cultural and educational center with a strong religious heritage and a thriving business community and downtown. Many of the people, places, and stories that have contributed to