Jacksonville FL History

Page 10

15336.43      Robert 7 BIGELOW, was the son of  Benjamin 6 ( Paul 5 , Cornelius 4, Samuel 3, Samuel 2, John 1) and Eunice (AIKEN) BIGELOW, was born 17 October 1797 at Norfolk, Litchfield, CT.
There is an interesting oral history about Jacksonville that mentions the Bigelow Plantation:
There is more history of Jacksonville including cemeteries and houses including Robert Bigelow at:
jackvil2.htm ; jackvil3.htm; jackvil4.htm; jackvil5.htm; jackvil6.htm; jackvil7.htm; jackvil8.htm ; jackvil9.htm


 The Arlington Ferry 1920's. (ferry1.jpg)

     For several years Floral Bluff, west of Egleston, served as the primary steamboat landing place on the east bank of the St. Johns River. The railroad encouraged further settlement there. The community developed on the site of a fifty-seven acre grant given to Francis Richard, called Parque. Richard's claim, confirmed in 1825, ran in a narrow north-south strip along the river. The south part of the Jacksonville University campus presently occupies a part of Richard's Parque claim. Perhaps because of the landing there, the first post office in the area was established at Floral Bluff in 1887. Albert Frieseke, who maintained a store beside the dock at Floral Bluff, served as the first postmaster. The mail arrived daily in a pouch via ferry from Jacksonville. From Floral Bluff it was distributed to other post offices to the east, including Gilmore, sixteen miles distant. After the removal of the railroad, William Sherman, a local black resident, served as the local "star route carrier," transporting the pouch by mule or foot each day. Sherman died in 1941 at age 97.
     The original plat for Floral Bluff was filed March 1, 1887 by Gilbert H. Shepard. The plat contained merely four blocks, which ran east from the landing at the St. Johns River along the north edge of what is today Arlington Road. The principal early nineteenth century resident of Floral Bluff was Robert Bigelow (1797-1868), a trustee of the Francis Richard estate, who constructed a large residence on the heights, overlooking the river. An extensive orange grove surrounded his house, extending to the water's edge. Bigelow's house and plantation, later called the Bacon Place, provided the location for many moving pictures filmed in Jacksonville and Arlington during the short period between 1915 and 1920 when the industry prospered in the two communities. His daughter, Eugenia Bigelow
( 1837-1898), taught at the Egleston Heights public school in 1890.
     The JM&P ran two trains a day from the river landing to the beach, making stops at Egleston. Verona, Cohasset, and Gilmore. On one of its first runs the small engine stalled while climbing a bluff. The passengers had to disembark and help it over the hill. Thereafter. the JM&P became known as the "Jump, Men & Push Railroad." In 1893 the line changed hands. The new owners extended the tracks to South Jacksonville (now San Marco). Arlington, said one resident of the area, thereupon "lost some of its prestige." To reach South Jacksonville, the company constructed a bridge across the mouth of the Arlington River. The bridge, recalled one resident of the time, "was a source of trouble to boat owners and an unsightly thing for all Pottsburg Creek residents." The railroad did not run long. Low revenues apparently led to a discontinuation of service in 1895. John Stockton purchased the rolling stock, held it for a time, and then sold it to H.H. Buckrnan in 1899. Buckman in turn sold the right-of-way to the Mayport Terminal Company. The rails, according to one contemporary observer, were taken up and shipped to Cuba, the bridge dismantled, and the pilings removed. Thereafter, said the same correspondent, "We had a clear river front view again and our creek was open once more."
     During the few years that it provided service between Arlington and Burnside Beach, the railroad undoubtedly inspired development along the line, speeding settlement of Egleston, Verona, Cosmo, and Gilmore. The line's abandonment, in turn, led soon to the demise of the settlernent at Egleston. Although more than two decades passed before the Methodist Church was relocated, many buildings were soon torn down, sorne burned, and others moved. The hotel was barged southward to Arlington, where it became the residence of Mrs. R.E. Colcord, founder of the Eastern Shore Woman's Club, later renamed the Arlington Woman's Club.
     As the century neared its end, Jacksonville's reputation as one of Florida's premier winter resorts was challenged by the development of cities in southeastern Florida. Upon completion of a rail line reaching to the southern tip of the peninsula, Miami and West Palm Beach became the destination of choice for visitors and wealthy northerners seeking winter home sites. The tourist industry followed them. North Florida was dealt a second economic blow in the winter of 1894-1895 when the "Great Freeze" effectively destroyed its citrus industry. The cultivation, processing, and shipping of oranges had been an important staple of trade along the St. Johns River since the 1870s. In north Florida the business evaporated in the winter of 1895-96. In many communities people whose property values disappeared simply took off. William Matthews' groves in Arlington were among those destroyed by the great freeze. Production of citrus in Florida thereafter shifted to warmer parts of the peninsula, south of New Smyrna Beach. Jacksonville's once prosperous citrus shipping industry never resumed a role in the local economy.
     Abandonment of the railroad and the great freeze struck two blows at the east bank communities. Recovery came slowly. The area's development paused for more than a decade before resuming with noticeable vigor. Creation in the late part of the century of post office branches east of the St. Johns River in Duval County mark Arlington's population shifts. Floral Bluff received the first office in 1887. Following completion of the JM&P rail line, a post office branch was organized in 1889 at Egleston Heights, no more than a mile eastward. It merged with the Floral Bluff office in 1895. The Verona office, created in 1888, became the Gilmore office in 1901. The main Arlington office, established in 1894, was first called Matthews and located at the water's edge in what is today Clifton. It became the Arlington office only in 1912 when it was relocated to the northwest corner of University Boulevard and Arlington Road. Not until 1954 was it merged into the main Jacksonville office. The building remained at the southwest corner of Arlington Road and River Bluff Road until 1972.


Arlington Cemeteries
     The 1995 historic survey recorded eight historic cemeteries in Arlington. Six of them contain nineteenth century grave sites. The origins of three of the cemeteries, the Sammis Family Cemetery in the Clifton area, the Bigelow Family Cemetery along Floral Bluff Avenue, and the Parsons Cemetery north of Fort Caroline Road, date to the pre-Civil War period. Surviving headstones and grave markers feature the names of many of Arlington's early residents, some of whom played instrumental roles in the history of Jacksonville and Florida. The Parsons Cemetery, pictured here, for example, is the final resting place of Mary Dorcas Parsons Broward, mother of early twentieth century Florida Governor Napoleon B. Broward.

The Parsons Cemetery


The Bigelow Cemetery

continued on jackvi11.htm ...............


Modified - 01/19/2003
(c) Copyright 2003 Bigelow Society, Inc. All rights reserved.
Rod  Bigelow - Director
< rodbigelow@netzero.net >

Rod Bigelow (Roger Jon12 BIGELOW)

P.O. Box 13  Chazy Lake
Dannemora, N.Y. 12929
< rodbigelow@netzero.net > 
BACK TO THE BIGELOW SOCIETY PAGE

BACK TO BIGELOW HOME PAGE