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Manatee County,Florida

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  • Lillian A Stenson Westerberg (1900 - 1968)
    US Census 1910: Osceola Twp, Houghton, Michigan Married to Hilding F. Stenson in 1920: US Census 1930: Detroit, Wayne, Michigan US Census 1940: Detroit, Wayne, Michigan Divorced. US Census...
  • Harold Dickson Ralph Hamilton (1898 - 1977)
    Curator note : Multiple marriages, two indicated previous to his 1952 marriage, but no documents found as of 06/16/2024. -- Private User Earlier marriage, 1952, to Emma Davis (Cornett): Later marri...
  • Milton Gaylor Durkee (1906 - 1981)
    When Milton Gaylor Durkee was born on 28 May 1906, in Unionville, Tuscola, Michigan, United States, his father, Warren Gaylor Durkee, was 26 and his mother, Cornelia C Metzger, was 29. He married Lefa ...
  • Lefa E. Durkee (1907 - 1989)
    When Lefa E. Price was born on 30 January 1907, in Lansing, New Hope, Bucks, Pennsylvania, United States, her father, Almo Clark Price, was 32 and her mother, Bertha May Hyde, was 23. She married Milto...
  • Malcolm Rosier (1902 - 1978)
    Obituary

This project is for those that were born, lived or died in Manatee County, Florida.

The area now known as Manatee County had been inhabited by Native Americans for thousands of years. Shell middens and other archaeological digs have been conducted throughout the county including at Terra Ceia and at Perico Island. These digs revealed materials belonging to peoples from the Woodland period.

Some historians have suggested that the southern mouth of the Manatee River was the landing site of the De Soto Expedition.

Due to conflict during the Patriot War and First Seminole War, many African Americans fled north Florida and some settled in modern-day Bradenton. The settlement they founded on the Manatee River was called Angola. By 1819, the population of Angola possibly reached as high as 600-700 people.

The area was opened to settlement in 1842 with the passing of the Armed Occupation Act. Early settlements included the Manatee Colony led by Colonel Samuel Reid, which numbered thirty one individuals both black and white. Other prominent early settlers were Joseph and Hector Braden who moved into an area near the Manatee River in 1842. The two had lost their land for their plantations in Northern Florida during the Panic of 1837. They were said to have heard that there was abundant land in the area. The brothers moved into a log cabin five miles north of the mouth of the Manatee River. Four years later Hector drowned while trying to cross the Manatee River on his horse during a hurricane. Despite this tragic event, Joseph decided he would still build the Braden sugar mill at the mouth of the Manatee River and the Braden River. He later built a dock where Main Street was and fortified the area near his house building a stockade. A few years later in 1851, he would build the Braden Castle, which was made out of tabby and served as his residence. In spring of 1856, the fortified home was attacked by Seminole Indians during the Third Seminole War. It would later become a popular tourist attraction in the early 1900s with Tin Can Tourists. He would only stay there for the next six years before moving to Tallahassee.

When Manatee County was created in January 1855, it covered 5,000 square miles and included all of what are now Charlotte County, DeSoto County, Glades County, Hardee County, Highlands County, Sarasota County and part of Lee County. The original county seat was Manatee, a village in what is now eastern Bradenton.

Following the Seminole Wars, Manatee County continued to grow both in population and in economic output. Cattle, hogs, and some sheep were all raised, and processed sugar and molasses was produced and exported. This agricultural economy, like much of the south, was increasingly becoming reliant on slave labor. A federal census in 1860 showed that the county had a population of 601 white people and 214 enslaved black people. After the outbreak of the American Civil War, Manatee County provided supplies to the Confederate army. Aside from the Union blockade, the Federal army dispatched raiding parties throughout Florida to further limit the Confederate supply chain. For example, in August 1864, the Union schooner USS Stonewall came up the Manatee river on a raid. According to the Florida State Archives, Dr. Braden's sugar works was destroyed during the raid. However, another source states that Braden's property was left untouched.

According to a partial list of soldiers of the Confederate States of America, the county also sent at least 100 of its citizens to fight. Some of the men from Manatee would be recruited to the 7th Florida Infantry Regiment, which fought as part of the Army of Tennessee.

Within Manatee County is the Gamble Plantation, a sugar plantation and home of Major Robert Gamble. According to some, following the Civil War, the Confederate Secretary of State, Judah P. Benjamin, took refuge at the mansion before escaping to England. In 1866, the county seat was temporarily moved from Manatee to Pine Level but was moved back in 1889. The move was reportedly done in an effort to make the county seat more centrally located but some historians also contend that it was done by the reconstructionists to punish Manatee for being a hotbed of rebel sympathies before and during the Civil War.

Cemeteries

Cemeteries of Florida

Links

Wikipedia