In 1860, 32-year-old mail carrier Hubbard
Hart proposed a steamboat service on the Ocklawaha River. People thought he was
crazy. Common wisdom had it that this tributary to the St. Johns was too narrow
and twisting for paddle wheelers. But, several months and a lot of channel
clearing later, Hart piloted a small steamer, James Burt, on its maiden
voyage to Silver Spring.
By the end of the decade, steamboats of
Harts new Hart Line company were making regular trips up the Ocklawaha to the
river’s head at Lake Griffin and up Silver River to Silver Spring. It seemed
Hart was all out of surprises when, in 1869, he introduced his newest boat—the Panasofkee.
But, it wasn’t the boat that set the rumor-mill spinning, it was the name.
Panasofkee is the name of a lake that lies a dozen miles west of Lake Griffin
and flows into the Withlacoochee river—a tributary of the Gulf of Mexico.
Hart’s intentions were clear. He was planning to dig a canal to connect the
Ocklawaha to the Withlacoochee. It wasn’t a new idea.
Beginning with Pedro Menendez de Aviles,
the Spanish explorer/commander who founded St. Augustine in 1565, a parade of
schemers and visionaries dreamed of finding a way to cross Florida by water. At
first they hoped to find a natural connection. When it was eventually proven that
a natural crossing didn’t exist, they contemplated digging one. No river felt
the brunt of this enterprise more than the Ocklawaha. It seemed like the
perfect choice.
In its natural state, the Ocklawaha
flowed northward from its source at Lake Griffin as a slow, tannin-stained
blackwater stream. After passing through several miles of open marsh, the river
entered one of the most beautiful, species-rich, floodplain forests in the
state. Twenty-five miles below the marshes, the river took on new life as the
crystal clear water of Silver River joined from the west. This added an
incredible 650 million gallons per day of artesian spring water to its flow.
From here, the clearer, swifter river
continued north though a mile-wide swamp forest of cypress, red maple, ash, tupelo, hickory,
water elm, swamp dogwoods and other water-tolerant trees. With no real “banks”
to direct its course, the river carved a twisted path northward. After another
thirty miles, having received the flow from Orange Creek, the river curved
eastward toward the St. Johns River. As it approached the St. Johns, the
channel widened, as did the adjacent swamplands, where a maze of braided creeks
could confound even seasoned woodsman.
The importance of this abundant river and
forest was made apparent by the presence of many archaeological sites. The
scant remains of ancient villages gave quiet testament to countless generations
that occupied these sites. Discarded pieces of broken pottery and mollusk
shells could be seen in the hard, compacted matrix of large refuse middens.
Less common were sand burial mounds. Many middens and mounds can still be seen
along the river’s banks.
By the time European explorers arrived,
Ocklawaha was home to a tribe of Timucua speaking Indians called the Acuera. Spanish
explorer, Hernando De Soto was the first white man to encounter these fierce
warriors and, after watching them riddle his dog Bruto with nearly fifty
arrows, was the first to realize they were best left alone.
After the demise of the Acuera and all of
north Florida’s Timucua tribes in the 1700’s, Creek migrants moved into the
Ocklawaha region. Soon they were being called by a new name—Seminoles. It was
they who gave the name Ocklawaha, the “crooked river.” Several generations of
Seminoles called this area home, living in relative isolation while other, more
‘hospitable’ parts of the region were over-run with settlers. But with the
cession of Florida to the United States 1821, a new wave of white pioneers
poured in from the north and tensions escalated. Within two years, the
situation forced the creation of a large reservation in central Florida. The
Indian Agency, headquartered at Ft. King near Silver Spring, would be the seed
from which the later town of Ocala would grow. Predictably, the reservation boundary
proved untenable.
In 1835, war broke out. For nearly seven
years, the Second Seminole War kept Florida in constant turmoil. In the early
years of the campaign, the Indians found safe refuge in the dense forests of
the Ocklawaha river basin. But, eventually, like the Acuera before them, the
Seminoles were forced out.
With the Seminoles reduced to a
manageably small population in the Everglades, white settlers moved in. North
and west of the Ocklawaha, plantations and orange groves were established,
while to the east, only the most determined pioneers were willing to eke a
living in the high, sandy ‘scrub.’ Along the river, the ancient forest echoed
with the sound of loggers axes and the thunder of virgin cypress trees crashing
to the forest floor. Bucked and dragged to the river, the giant logs were
lashed together and rafted to one of several river-side sawmills. It was hard
work maneuvering log rafts down the twisted channel of the Ocklawaha. So too
was ‘poling’ a barge loaded with cut lumber down to the St. Johns. But, it was
the only way. Everybody knew you couldn’t get a steamboat up the Ocklawaha.
Everybody, except for Hubbard Hart.
In Hart, Menendez’ 300 year old dream had
found a new champion. But it had changed a bit. Where the early Spaniards had
believed there was a natural passage, later visionaries, now aware that no such
waterway existed, considered digging a canal. In 1826 and again in 1832,
Congress authorized surveys to determine the feasibility of such a project.
Both concluded that the idea was impractical. But, they left the slight germ of
hope for future schemers by concluding that “if” such a canal were to be dug,
the best route would be up the Ocklawaha and across to the Withlacoochee.
In the end, Hart failed to get government
approval and abandoned his plan. But, the steamboat route he created had opened the area for
commerce and, more importantly, tourists. By the late 1800’s, there were few
“wild frontiers” left in the country. But, compliments of the Hart’s steamers,
tourists could embark on an adventure into the Florida wilderness. Writers,
artists, politicians and well-heeled Northern socialites, stood alongside
backwoodsmen and naturalists at the railings of Harts small steamers as they
turned off of the broad St. Johns and headed up the dark, mysterious Ocklawaha.
In his 1875 travel guide, writer Sidney
Lanier suggested that travelers on Ocklawaha steamers hike their feet up onto the
railing, lean back in their chair and, looking up into the tree canopy overhead, “ sail, sail,
sail through the cypresses, through the vines, through the May day, through the floating
suggestions of the unutterable that come up, that sink down …and so shall your heart
forever afterwards interpret the Ocklawaha to mean repose.”
By the end of the 1800’s, railroads had
all but eliminated the need for steamboats on the Ocklawaha. Gone were the writers and
artists. Gone were the days of romance. And into the void returned the canal developers.
As the 20th century dawned, industrial
age technologies and Victorian ideals of conquering nature had joined forces and
were wreaking environmental havoc throughout the world. In Florida, a statewide
campaign, of ditching and damming wetlands, both for land reclamation and water
transportation, built to a crescendo which, predictably, led once more to the banks of the Ocklawaha.
In the 1930’s, construction began on a cross-state canal. After only six
months, public support and funding dried up and the project was terminated with
relatively little to show for the effort. But the idea still smoldered.
The project resurfaced during World War
II and gained legislative approval. But, again, it laid mired in a funding and
logistical quagmire. Finally, in 1964, construction of the Cross Florida Barge
Canal began. But at the same time the long dreamed-of canal was finally
becoming a reality, so too was a growing understanding of the complexities of
natural systems. Organizations Like the Audubon Society and concerned citizens
to spoke out passionately in defense of the river. A leading champion of this
cause was Marjorie Carr, whose unprecedented determination and concern for
Florida’s natural heritage led to the founding of the Florida Defenders of the
Environment.
In 1969, just as it was beginning to look
like Menendez’ 400 year dream would be realized, and with a 9,000 acre
reservoir in place, the steam roller of ‘progress’ came head to head with
Marjorie Carr, the FDE and the swelling ranks of impassioned environmentalists.
The project was halted by Richard Nixon in 1971, pending further studies. In
1991, it was officially de-authorized.
The partially-completed canal
remains in limbo. With deconstruction already approved, 21st century Floridians watch
and wait as a handful of local politicians cling desperately to 19th century values and
continue to hold the river hostage by blocking funding for the rivers
restoration. At issue—good fishing. In the final decades of the 20th
century, while researchers researched and politicians wrangled, the fish living
among the submerged snags in the artificial Rodman Reservoir were growing fat
and happy. Fishermen stuffed their wells with lunker bass, boat manufacturers,
tackle companies and tournament organizers stuffed their wallets. And all these
people stuffed their hands into the hands of campaigning politicians.
Today, most Floridians don’t realize they
are paying nearly a million dollars per year to maintain this big, artificial
fishing pond or that they are financing the continued destruction of one of
Florida’s finest natural treasures; a river formed along an ancient fault line
from a massive earthquake millions of years ago, making it one of Florida’s
oldest and most unique rivers. They don’t realize the ecology of the Ocklawaha
and Silver Rivers have been drastically altered by this reservoir they are
paying for. They don’t know that the majority of this river’s flow comes from
one of the largest springs in the world—Silver Spring. They don’t know that
several species of fish and eels and even Florida’s beloved manatees are
blocked from migrating up and down the river. They don’t know that the people
operating the dam—on behalf of the Florida taxpayers—make no attempt to
regulate the output of water through the dam to mimic the natural water cycles
necessary for the health of the river and forests downstream from there. They
don’t know that organizations like Audubon Society, Florida Defenders of the
Environment, Putnam County Environmental Council, Adventure Outpost and others
are working hard to have this dam removed and save this natural treasure that
belongs to the people of Florida.
Most Floridians don’t know there is a bitter battle being fought on their behalf. When they boat and fish in other parts of the river, they see nothing to indicate that part of the river is being held hostage. Upstream and downstream from
Rodman Reservoir, Ocklawaha flows on, seemingly undaunted by the turmoil that
surrounds her. There she remains, as Sidney Lanier proclaimed, one of the
“sweetest waterways in the world.”
For more about efforts to remove Kirkpatrick Dam and restore the Ocklawaha, visit the Florida Defenders of the Environment website at: http://www.fladefenders.org/ "
3 comments:
Thanks for the excellent history! As a guide who has done small eco-tours for 13 years in SW Florida and North Central Florida, my concern is the commercial exploitation of the springs that is taking place. In the Sarasota area, 16 years ago there used to be 3-5 companies operating, with well trained guides taking a limited number of people. Now, there are 25-33 companies, 95% of which are just renting as many kayaks as possible, and with "tour guides" who have very little experience. This "More kayaks = higher profit" mentality has led to the decline in quality of tours, and it has placed a tremendous amount of stress on wildlife. Where do we draw the line to protect the environment? The springs are being loved to death.
Thank you for the history lesson. Hopefully new history can be made, and the dam taken down.
Marjorie contemplated blowing up the dam but clung to the ldea of community action to remove the damn dam and we are still clinging to faith in the voice of the people,for thirty years I have protested,listened to experts,wrote letters,sent e-mails and still the damn dam stands maybe Marjorie's original idea is the only way to finally rid the river of this concrete blight.....my 2 cents
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