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Tara S. Gree, Clerk of Court and Comptroller of Clay County, FL
Clerk of Court and Comptroller of Clay County, FL
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Railroads

1892 Railroad Lines

This 1897 map shows lines and stations at the heyday of rail in Clay County. The steamboat era was ending, the automobile and roads hadn’t come along yet, and there was still a little timber to haul out of the county. The names of the lines and positions of depots changed all the time.

 

The Florida Railroad (From Fernandina to Cedar Key)

The rails have been important to Clay County from the late 1850’s when land grants were given for the Florida Railroad which would connect Fernandina with Cedar Key. David Yulee was the railroad president and an old Clay County resident, Joseph Finnegan, was the contractor who laid the tracks. Except for the Highland station, it lay outside the county. Its importance was in the very large number of odd-section railroad land grants in Range 23. E. N. Dickerson (E. N. D.). For a brief period, this railroad’s owners were the county’s largest land owners, being treasurer of the line and owning the even sections in the same area. The Florida Railroad was taken by the Union Army in March, 1862, and they remained in control of it through the war. The line changed hands at least six times, finally being called Seaborn when its tracks were removed in 1932.

Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West Railroad

Green Cove Springs & Melrose Railroad

The Middleburg, Highland and Lake Butler Railroads

The Line to Penney Farms

The Georgia Southern and Florida

Narrow-gauge shortline from Green Cove Springs to Magnolia Springs

The Middleburg line that was never built

Orange Park & Beyond

Stations

  • Orange Park– The Town pre-dates the railroad and was developed by Washington G. Benedict and his Florida Winter Home & Improvement Co. In 1877.
  • Black Creek (Station)– Just North of Black Creek
  • Fleming / Russell
  • Self- This station was apparently only in operation in 1929.
  • Melrose Crossing, Walkill, West Tocoi
  • The Shortline from Magnolia Springs to Green Cove
  • The Hay Burner
  • Magnolia Springs– The most exquisite station in the county, complete with architecturally interesting building, fountains and gardens — all to attract guests to the Magnolia Springs Hotel.
  • Green Cove Springs– Green Cove Springs was the busiest station in the county, and warranted a side track to accommodate all the cars.

Depot Doctors Inlet

Railroad Depot Orange Park

Train on Railroad Depot Orange Park

Russell Railroad Depot

Magnolia Springs Railroad Depot

Railroad Depot Green Cove Springs (in color)

Railroad Depot West Tocoi

Railroad Depot West Tocoi

Green Cove Springs & Melrose Railroads

“Among other improvident grants of land from which the State received no corresponding benefit, we may mention in passing, the gift of seven thousand, seven hundred and eight-one and 48-100 acres of heavily timbered land, in Clay county, to the Green Cove Springs & Melrose railroad. When the timber was removed from this land, the railroad which was very little, if any, more than a lumber road, gave back the land largely denuded of its then chief value, for permission to remove its rails, doubtless to be sued in the construction of another lumber road somewhere else.” (FL Senate, Appendix to the Journal, Report of the Joint Commission, 1907, pg 349)

Stations

The derisive language of the Senate might explain why we can’t find photos of the depots — if the owners knew or suspected it would be temporary; they wouldn’t have invested in stations.

  • Clinch– The terminus and office. Just south of Green Cove Springs. Intersected the JT&KW.
  • Wilkinson’s (or Wilkerson’s)
  • Novella (Florence Mills or Novilla)
  • Sharon (East Sharon and West Sharon)
  • Belmore (Belmore City)-The line only ran as far as Belmore from Clinch for quite a while. The Belmore Land Co. offered lots in 1884.
  • Wilderness (Thomasville)
  • Athens
  • Kellums
  • Lake View (Lakeview, on Kingsley Lake)- The Tropical Land Co. offered lots in 1885. R. Fulton Cutting was the president of the Tropical Land Co., and his brother, W. Bayard Cutting, was on the board of directors of the Florida Central & Peninsula Railway.
  • B&W Junction
  • Springlake (Spring Lake)
  • Newburg (Florence)
  • Smaile’s Switch (may be Newburg)
  • Hunters Mill (may be Smaile’s Switch)
  • Saranac
  • Melrose– Melrose was the end of the line, except that transportation continued by use of the Santa Fe canal.
  • JC Penney’s Line to Penney Farms
  • Long Branch– Florida Farms & Industries first developed the Long Branch area, owning as much as 1/3 of the county. Predecessor to Penney Farms. A beautiful “Pecan” brochure is available at the Archives.
  • The Florida Railroad Stations- The Florida Railroad in 1864, just before Civil War hostilities — showing the Trail Ridge Station, the first RR station in Clay County.
  • Highland
  • Georgia Southern & Florida Railroad Stations

  • Brooklyn

Railroad Depot at Longbranch Station

Railroad Depot Long Branch FL Farms Pecan Brochure

Railroad Depot Melrose

1864 Railroads at Civil War in Clay County

Railroad Depot Highland

Railroad Depot Brooklyn

Books at the Archives

  • Bulletin 86: The Story of the Florida Railroads
  • Focus: The Railroad in Transition, by Robert S. Carper
  • Golden Years of Trains, by Hamlyn
  • History of Railroads in America, by Oliver Jensen
  • Iron Horses, by E. P. Alexander
  • Locomotives by Colin Garratt

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