Jacksonville (Florida) - geography.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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and southern sections and avoiding the downtown bottleneck where Interstate 95 crosses the Saint Johns River at the Fuller Warren Bridge.
In addition to being a regional highway crossroads, the city is a railway hub, with Amtrak passenger service and several freight routes.
The city’s expanding airport,located in northern Jacksonville, was the nation’s fastest growing in passenger volume in the mid-1990s.
V GOVERNMENT
Jacksonville has a mayor-council form of municipal government.
The mayor and the 19 councilors are elected to four-year terms.
VI HISTORY
The Timucua people resided in the Jacksonville region for centuries before Europeans first arrived in 1562, led by French explorer Jean Ribault.
The Europeans carrieddiseases to the Timucuans, who lacked immunity and were quickly decimated.
In 1564 the first white settlement in the area of modern Jacksonville was established byFrench Huguenots (the name given the French followers of Protestantism).
They built Fort Caroline on a bluff above the Saint Johns River.
In 1565 troops from theSpanish settlement of San Agustín (now Saint Augustine) attacked the fort and killed its defenders.
Meanwhile, French troops sailing to attack San Agustín wereshipwrecked by a storm and later massacred by the Spanish.
While the French destroyed Fort Caroline in a battle three years later, they never again attemptedsettlement in Florida.
The British took control of the area from Spain under a treaty ending the French and Indian War (1754-1763).
Jacksonville grew up around a ford, or shallow place, in the Saint Johns River.
Because settlers drove cattle across the river there, the community was first known asCowford.
In 1822 (the year after the Florida territory came under United States control) a more formal community was laid out and named for the new governor,Andrew Jackson.
Jacksonville was chartered as a town in 1832 and incorporated as a city in 1859.
By the mid-19th century, it had become an important port for thetimber, cotton, and citrus fruits that were produced in the city’s growing hinterland.
During the American Civil War (1861-1865), Jacksonville was occupied by Uniontroops on four separate occasions, and much of the city was destroyed by the end of that war.
By the 1880s Jacksonville was attracting a growing number of winter vacationers, which prompted the completion of the first railroad line from the North.
Once this linebegan operating, Jacksonville immediately became a vacation mecca (nicknamed “The Winter City in the Summer Land”), luring more than 100,000 visitors per year.
Inthe same era, however, a yellow fever epidemic in 1888 killed hundreds of inhabitants and a disastrous fire in 1901 destroyed the city again only 40 years after the CivilWar.
But Jacksonville quickly rebuilt itself and continued to grow and prosper.
During World War II (1939-1945) the United States government constructed military installations in the area, including the Mayport naval facility, which became one ofthe United States Navy’s most important bases in the Southeast.
Following the war, Jacksonville decentralized as a result of population movement to the suburbs.
TheCivil Rights Movement produced upheaval in the city during the 1950s and 1960s because Jacksonville at the time was one of the South’s leading bastions of racialsegregation; associated rioting broke out in 1966.
The crusade to produce social change led to effective school desegregation and urban renewal programs.
Also helpingto launch the new era was the 1968 consolidation with Duval County, still regarded as one of the most ambitious metropolitan government experiments undertaken inAmerica.
By the 1970s and 1980s, Jacksonville had become part of the Sun Belt development thrust that was transforming many of the nation’s southern-tier states.
Expansionof existing industries together with the creation of a thriving new service sector drew thousands of job-seeking migrants to the area.
The new business communitysuccessfully transformed the city’s image, one of its greatest successes being the attraction of the Mayo Clinic’s first satellite facility outside its home base in Rochester,Minnesota.
During this period the city oversaw the cleanup of emissions from its paper and chemical manufacturing plants.
In the 1990s the successful luring of a majorleague football franchise galvanized the city.
Contributed By:Peter O.
MullerMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
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