Fort Clarke, Florida Explained

Fort Clarke was an unincorporated community in central Alachua County. The fort established was by the US Army during the Second Seminole War. A historical marker commemorates the fort, which was abandoned by the US Army in 1840. In 1841, 16 citizens voted at Fort Clarke on adopting a proposed constitution for Florida. In May 1845, the community was a precinct at which seven residents voted in the election of the state governor and legislators, and the representative to the US House of Representatives, after Florida was admitted to the union as a state. A post office was established in 1846 and closed in 1858. In 1883, John Bevill, who was described as the model farmer of Alachua County, had over 1000acres in cultivation at Fort Clarke. Two churches, the Fort Clarke United Methodist Church and the Greater Fort Clarke Missionary Baptist Church, are currently located in the vicinity of the former site of the fort. The site is now part of the urbanized area west of Gainesville.[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]

References

29.6597°N -82.4395°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Fort Clarke Marker, Gainesville, Florida. June 20, 2021. University of Florida Digital Commons.
  2. Dibble. Earnest F.. Fall 1999. Giveaway Forts: Territorial Forts and the Settlement of Florida. The Florida Historical Quarterly. 78. 2 . 220. 30149384.
  3. Web site: Fort Clark (Alachua County). June 21, 2021. Florida Memory: State Library and Archives of Florida.
  4. Book: Bradbury. Alford G.. A chronology of Florida post offices. Hallock. E. Story. Florida Federation of Stamp Clubs. 1962. 30.
  5. Book: Webber, Carl. The Eden of the South. 1883. New York. 91.
  6. Web site: Feature query results for Fort Clarke. June 20, 2021. USGS GNIS.