Palm Valley
Posted by: Markerman62
N 30° 10.627 W 081° 23.889
17R E 461667 N 3338478
Off Palm Valley Rd. on Canal Blvd.
Waymark Code: WMEN2P
Location: Florida, United States
Date Posted: 06/16/2012
Views: 12
This rich hammock once covered with oaks, magnolias and especially palms was originally known as the Plains of Diego, after Don Diego de Espinosa, who built a small fort nearby in the 1730's. Around 1900, the community of Diego was renamed Palm Valley after the Sabal Palm. The Sabal or Cabbage Palm, Florida's state tree, was for many years an important contributor to the local economy, adding hundreds of dollars annually to the meager income of area settlers. Each winter, orders came from the nation's churches for fresh cut palm buds for the celebration of Palm Sunday. Palm buds were cut by the thousands, packed in bunches of twenty-five or fifty, and taken to Durbin Station on the Florida East Coast Railway where they were picked up by the train. Later, after the Intracoastal Waterway opened in 1912, stacks of palms were taken to a dock on the canal where they were picked up by the Navajo or Alamo, two packet boats that hauled freight between Miami and Jacksonville over the new waterway. The completion of the Intracoastal Waterway through Palm Valley, in addition to allowing boat passage, effectively drained much of the area that was formally marshland.
Marker Number: F-554
Date: 2005
County: St Johns
Marker Type: Roadside
Sponsored or placed by: St. Johns County Board of County Commissioners and the Florida Department of State
Website: Not listed
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