At the time
Pedro Menendez de Aviles, founder of St. Augustine, explored the St.
Johns River in 1565, the Indians residing here were probably part of the
Mayaca culture whose chiefdom was near present Volusia south of Lake
George. Clustered in small villages, they collected snails, freshwater
mussels and shellfish, cooked turtles in the shell, roasted deer,
alligator, and other game, and gathered roots, nuts, and berries.
By the time of Menendez, the Spanish had explored and mapped the river
to its headwaters. When Florida became a British holding (1763-1783),
John and William Bartram chronicled their journeys upriver to observe
and record the peninsula’s flora and fauna for the King. They described
their encounters with the Seminole Indians who had by then migrated into
the peninsula, filling the void left by the decimation of Florida’s
native cultures. At present day Stone Island, the Bartrams observed
calciferous deposits containing human remains.
Beginning in the 1760s, William Gerard de Brahm, Surveyor General for
the British Crown, observed and mapped “Lake Grant” (Monroe) and the
river for the colonial government of East Florida. To encourage
development, the English Crown granted huge tracts of land along the
river to nobility and mercantile interests who usually remained absentee
proprietors. The north shore of Lake Monroe was partitioned into
20,000-acre rectangular tracts awarded to Duncan, Archibald, and
Alexander Grant, possibly relatives of East Florida Governor James
Grant.
Not long after Spain regained Florida from Britain, the Spanish King
also began to offer land grants to encourage settlement and fill the
void left by the departed British. The goal was also to establish a
buffer between the Indians being pushed south by white settlement in the
English colonies and the colonial government in St. Augustine.
Entrepreneurs such as London resident Joseph Rattenbury, who applied for
the vast “Volusia tract,” received thousands of acres of land along the
river. Horatio S. Dexter, a controversial figure in Florida politics,
later acquired part of this tract from Rattenbury and established a
plantation he called Volusia.
In 1823, after Florida was acquired from Spain, Lt. Charles Vignoles
surveyed the region for the U.S. Territorial government and noted a
large sulphur spring on the north shore of “Monroe’s Lake” in the area
where present day Green Springs is located.