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ChazzCreations
PO BOX 1909
POST FALLS, ID 83877
The U.S. Census Bureau 2016 estimate for the county is 15,887. Union County was created in 1921 from part of Bradford County. It was named to honor the concept of unity. Union County is the location of the Reception and Medical Center (RMC), and the Union Correctional Institution . Union CI is a maximum security prison and is home to part of Florida's Death Row. The death chamber is located at nearby Florida State Prison (FSP). Florida State Prison also houses some death-row inmates.
Brown Browns Still Cliftonville Cypress Pointe MH Park Dana Danville Dukes Ellerbee Goldies MH Park Guilford Johnstown Lake Butler Macs MH Park Maines Devoe MH Park Miller Providence Railford Virginias Trailer Park Worthington Springs
Maines Devoe Mobile Home Park is a populated place now part of the City of Lake Butler.
Providence is believed to be the second oldest Florida settlement next to St. Augustine. The Lonnie Summers Family found this statement written on the wall of the Old Odom House they purchased in 1936: "St. Augustine was founded in 1565. Shortly thereafter a small band of soldiers settled in Providence." Hernando De Soto's army passed near this village on its trip to west Florida in 1539. A Spanish mission, Catalina De Ajomica, located four miles southeast of Providence, was built by Franciscan missionaries in the early 1600's to evangelize Timucuan Indians. It was destroyed by English soldiers and their Indian allies in 1702. Daniel Stewart had a plantation here in 1790 where he grew Sea Island cotton. Orange groves produced abundantly. Families from Georgia and South Carolina settled here before 1830, but the greatest influx of settlers was between 1850 and 1860. Descendants of these pioneers who still live in Providence are: Bielling, Bivins, Brooks, Brown, Clyatt, Crawford, Croft, Dees, Douglas, Edenfield, Fralick, Gay, Harden, Holmes, Keith, Nes Smith, Newsom, Odom, O'Steen, Parrish, Perry, Renfroe, Roberts, Sasser, Shaller, Smith, Summers, Thomas, Ward, Weeks, Williams and York. Settlers were attacked by Indians during the Seminole Indian Wars (1835-42), and sought refuge at strategically placed forts within a four-mile radius of Providence--Ft. Call on Santa Fe River. Ft. Ward on Olustee Creek, and Ft.No.15-East Florida on Swift Creek. Eleven known Indian War veterans and forty-six Civil War veterans are buried in area cemeteries. Providence was a prosperous, thriving community pre and post Civil War. It was the first county seat of all land now comprising Columbia, Bradford and Union counties. A post office opened in 1854 and operated intermittently until 1906 with James L. Turner as postmaster and John D. Harden and Willie Thomas as mail carriers. Physicians practicing here were: Doctors Coon, Davis, Lamb, Maines, Newsom, Powell, Tison, Wachope, and Witt. There were two drugstores owned by Dr. Newsom and Dr. Powell. L. G. Ware was a druggist. William W. Willis was a lawyer and judge. Providence had a bank, photographer-Jeremiah Mobley, butcher-R.D. Kierce, barber-Draiton Witt, blacksmiths-Raymond Roberts, C.F. Fralick, and V.J. Valentine, Odom cotton gin and Shelley & Ware sawmill. John Fralick operated a grist mill. J.H. Walters had a private school. General mercantile stores were owned by S.D. Hodges, James L. Turner, Odom & Weeks, and Lonnie Driggers. Gen. Charles P. Summerall, an early resident, assumed command of the U.S. Army as Chief of Staff when Gen. John J. Pershing retired in 1924. Summerall later became President of The Citadel. Old Providence Baptist Church, two miles northwest of Providence, was founded in 1833 making it the oldest Baptist church in Union County and one of the oldest Baptist churches in Florida.
By 1884, this small congregation of The United Methodist Church, had grown and this structure was erected and dedicated. Their surrounding town now had a post office, 3 stores, 2 churches, a grist mill, 2 sawmills and a doctor. The railroads which ran nearby daily delivered the agricultural goods produced here and commercial farming bolstered this small town.
Providence Cemetery https://theforgottensouth.com/blog/pioneers-providence
http://www.wizardofar.org/CFDocs/common/PageTemp.cfm?Cemetery=Providence&CemName=Providence&Org=
Railford The population was 255 at the 2010 census. As of 2018, the population recorded by the U.S. Census Bureau is 236.[4] It was home to the original Florida State Prison and continues to be home to a total of 3 prisons.
Railford Masonic Lodge
Railford Sapp Cemetery
Jeffrey D. Rimes
Flying Tiger Field Airport - FL54 in Worthington Springs, Florida Facility Usage: Private
South Gate 2016
2016
2016
2016
2019
Justin Lee Partin ~ 2019 center
2006 Rimes Fly-in
John Rimes, Charlotte Shaw & Fannie Louise Shaw
Eve, Fannie Louise Shaw & Charlotte Shaw 2006
Eve & John Rimes
Eve & Charlene Shaw Wynn 2006
Nelson & Laura Hawk 2006
Eve Shaw Novak, Charlotte Shaw, Charlene Shaw Wynn & Fannie Louise Shaw
Sierra Airpark Ultralight - FL48 in Worthington Springs, Florida Facility Usage: Private:
Owner John D. Rimes III
Les-Que One, Inc. has a location in Worthington Springs, FL: filed as a Domestic for Profit Corporation on Wednesday, June 02, 1982 in the state of Florida. Active officers are John D. Rimes, Director, Lessie Rimes-Director, Secretary and Treasurer, John D. Rimes, III, Chairman and President and Jeffrey D. Rimes-Director.
ChazzCreations
PO BOX 1909
POST FALLS, ID 83877