Once the head of
navigation on the St. Johns River, Enterprise became known far and wide
as a mecca for hunting, fishing, and tourism. Beginning even before the
Civil War, adventurers such as James Stirling, author of Letters from
the Slave States, embarked on steamers and made the exciting excursion
upriver from
Jacksonville to “the premier destination” on the river – Enterprise.
When they got there, they weren’t always excited about the
accommodations or the amenities of the town, however. The growing
popularity of the place led to overcrowding of the main hotel, the Brock
House, so that visitors were lucky to find an empty pool table or a dry
dinghy for a night’s rest. As to the town, Stirling called
Enterprise "the furthermost outpost of Southern civilization" - at that
time nothing more than a few workshops, mud roads,
and a wharf. Its main advantage was its position as the end of the
journey upriver. But it would soon become much more.
Enterprise
began as the dream of Cornelius Taylor, frontiersman and Indian fighter,
who raised a band of 50 to 60 colonists from Mayport and started the
first settlement at the conclusion of the Second Seminole War a mile to
the east of the community’s present location. As Territorial
Representative for Mosquito County, Taylor had Enterprise made the
county seat. Shortly after, Florida became a state, and this area of
Mosquito County was reformed as Orange County. After six months,
Mellonville was named county seat. Taylor and other residents moved to
Texas to follow the seat of the war.
When Jacob Brock, steamboat magnate, began regular service to Enterprise
and built a steamboat hotel a mile to the west, Enterprise was reborn in
its present location as a thriving river town. Shortly afterward, it was
designated the county seat for Volusia County. Pictured is his most
popular vessel, the “Darlington.”
Today, Enterprise is known as a model for other communities seeking to
preserve their history and rural charm in the face of increasing
annexations and encroaching development from nearby municipalities. In
2004 Enterprise made history again as the Enterprise Preservation
Society partnered with Volusia County to design the Enterprise Local
Area Plan, a blueprint for managing development within its boundaries.
Other sources:
Hopes, Dreams, and Promises by Richard Schene
Volusia: The West Side by Arthur E. Francke, Jr.
