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  • Colonel George Washington Scott, (CSA) (1829 - 1903)
    George Washington Scott (CSA) Scott was the son of U.S. Representative John Scott and the brother of U.S. Senator John Scott, Jr.. He was a Florida and Georgia businessperson, education phila...
  • James Hammer Hildreth (1914 - 1999)
  • William Beverley Randolph Hackley (1806 - 1867)
    William Beverly Randolph Hackley was born to Richard Shippey Hackley and and his 2nd wife, Harriet Randolph on October 7, 1806 in Virginia. Harriet was the daughter of Thomas Mann Randolph, intimate ...
  • Florence Almira Ramsey (1865 - aft.1931)
    Possible death record: ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Page 250 Bibliographic information: The descendants of Rev. Thomas Hooker, Hartfo...

This project is for those who were born ,lived or died in Leon County, Florida.

Leon County (Spanish: Condado de León) is a county in the Panhandle of the U.S. state of Florida. It was named after the Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de Leon. As of the 2020 census, the population was 292,198.

The county seat is Tallahassee, which is also the state capital and home to many politicians, lobbyists, jurists, and attorneys.

Leon County is included in the Tallahassee, Florida Metropolitan Statistical Area. Tallahassee is home to two of Florida's major public universities, Florida State University and Florida A&M University, as well as Tallahassee Community College. Together these institutions have a combined enrollment of more than 70,000 students annually, creating both economic and social effects.

Originally part of Escambia and later Gadsden County, Leon County was created in 1824. It was named after Juan Ponce de León, the Spanish explorer who was the first European to reach Florida.

The United States finally acquired this territory in the 19th century. In the 1830s, it attempted to conduct Indian Removal of the Seminole and Creek peoples, who had migrated south to escape European-American encroachment in Georgia and Alabama. After many Seminole were forcibly removed from the area or moved south to the Everglades during the Seminole Wars, planters developed cotton plantations based on enslaved labor.

By the 1850s and 1860s, Leon County had become part of the Deep South's "cotton kingdom". It ranked fifth of all Florida and Georgia counties in cotton production from the 20 major plantations. Uniquely among Confederate capitals east of the Mississippi River, in the American Civil War Tallahassee was never captured by Union forces. No Union soldiers set foot in Leon County until the Reconstruction Era.

Cemeteries

Cemeteries of Florida

Links

Wikipedia