Friends of Wakulla Springs

Wakulla Springs Historic Time Line



Web page © 2008 Friends of Wakulla Springs

36 to 20 million years ago The past few million years 120 thousand years ago 14,000 – 10,000 years ago 10,000 B.C. – 3,000 years ago First Spanish Period
(1528 – 1763)
1528 1704 British Period
1763 – 1783
Second Spanish Period
1783 – 1819
U.S. Territorial Days
1821 – 1845
1845 1850’s 1863 1870 – 1925 1925 1931 1934 1937 1941 1943 1953 1963 1976 1981 1986 1989 1993 1995 1996 1997 1998 2000 2000 2005 2005 2007 2008

The limestone bedrock in the Wakulla Springs area, formed at the bottom of a warm, shallow ocean and is similar to those bedrocks in the Florida Keys, the Bahamas, and other parts of the Caribbean. The organic sources of limestone carbonates were mostly animals which used carbonate minerals to build the hard skeletal parts of their bodies. Over millions of years, the hard skeletal body parts settled to the ocean floor forming the limestone.

For extended periods of time, the sea level was lower than the bedrock. This exposed the limestone to fresh water erosion that formed the caves, sinkholes and springs that we see today.

The sea level was higher (with the shore reaching into Middle Georgia) and Wakulla Springs was at the bottom of a bay in the Gulf of Mexico. This is similar to the Spring Creek Springs of today, located a few miles south of Wakulla, just off shore in the Gulf of Mexico.

When sea levels were much lower than today and the shoreline south of here extended 400 miles into the Gulf of Mexico, the ancestors of the Apalache lived along the streams and sinkholes. Wakulla Springs was a karst window similar to the current Cherokee Sink. Mastodons and other large animals were hunted here where the climate was milder and very dry.

At the end of the last ice age the earth’s temperature and its oceans rose to their current levels and the Wakulla karst window once again became a spring with a river flowing to the Gulf of Mexico. The population we call Apalache farmed the fertile areas and lived between the Aucilla and Ochlockonee rivers. A small village named Aute was located on the Wakulla River a short distance from the spring.

A few decades after Columbus landed in the Caribbean in 1492 about 50,000 Apalachee live in Florida’s Big Bend area. When the first Spanish conquistadors arrive in the 16th century, they find large Apalache settlements in the Tallahassee area (Lake Jackson Mounds State Park).

Panfilo de Narvaez and his Spanish explorers arrive on horses and foot seeking gold. The expedition's treasurer, Cabeza de Vacca, survives to write about the voyage that ended tragically for Narvaez. The first Europeans to explore the Wakulla Springs area arrive at an Apalachee hamlet known as Aute in 1528. It would be several years before other Spanish conquistadors follow Narvaez’s trail through the swamps from Tampa Bay.

A Spanish fort (San Marcos de Apalachee) built at the confluence of the Wakulla and St. Marks rivers is no match for English and Yamassee raiders who advance from the Carolinas to destroy Spanish Catholic missions. Timucuan and Apalachee peoples who are not killed during these raids either depart with the Spanish for Cuba or are taken as slaves to the Carolinas leaving Florida virtually depopulated.

One British planter settles his slaves as an absentee owner along the Wakulla River to continue growing corn on former Apalachee lands. At the end of the American Revolutionary War Florida is handed back to Spain.

Creek and Seminole Indians seek refuge along the Wakulla River, escaping increasingly hostile settlers in the new United States Mississippi territories (today's Alabama and southwest Georgia). U.S. Gen. Andrew Jackson invades Spanish Florida and chases British sympathizers to the fort at St. Marks where two are tried and killed. Seminole and Creek Indians also fear for their lives when Spain sells Florida to the United States in 1819 for $20 million. Jackson executes Creek Chief Hillis Hadjo (Francis the Prophet) at St. Marks April 18, 1818. His daughter, Milly Francis, leaves their Wakulla River settlement (Francis Town) for Oklahoma after pleading with her father to spare the life of an American soldier, Duncan McKimmon, which he does. Much later, in 1844, Milly Francis receives a Congressional Medal of Honor for her intervention. She does not live to see the medal or the annual special pension of $96. By 1818 the United States Congress authorized the forcible removal of all Indians living east of the Mississippi River to the western Indian Territories in what has become Oklahoma.

Milly Francis

Northerners sailing south around the Florida Keys arrive via St. Marks to settle Magnolia on the St. Marks River. African Americans continue to live along the Wakulla River, some having lived here since the Spanish eras. Wakulla County was chartered in 1843 with Newport as the county seat. Magnolia joined Port Leon in becoming a ghost town. African American oarsmen ferry people up the Wakulla River to see the wondrous spring.

Florida is admitted to the United States.

Word of Wakulla Springs’ beauty and clear water spreads through travel books, articles and newspapers. Sarah A. Smith identified mastodon bones on the floor of the spring basin.

The Springs were noted on a U.S. map for the first time.

Fertile uplands on the west side of the Wakulla River are farmed and African American churches in the area hold traditional baptisms at Wakulla and surrounding springs. At the turn of the century northerners try to develop the large Wakulla Spring into a health resort "under the pines."

Developer George T. Christie purchases Wakulla Springs and clears land for a swimming and excursion area. Area residents continue to offer boat rides, pulling large oars upstream into the clear spring boil.

Mastodon bones are removed from the spring. The reconstructed skeleton is displayed at the Museum of Florida History in Tallahassee. Pathé News filmed its first nderwater news clip of the recovery of the bones.

Financier Edward Ball purchases acreage around the main spring and develops plans to add a hotel and more acreage. Boat rides continue during the transition.

Wakulla Springs Lodge opens.

"Tarzan’s Secret Treasure" is filmed at Wakulla Springs.

     Tarzan

During World War II, nearby Camp Gordon Johnston uses the spring for amphibious training Exercises and rest and relaxation for soldiers training at the camp near Carrabelle.

"Creature from the Black Lagoon" is filmed at the spring.

     Creature from the Black Lagoon

The National Audubon Society designates Wakulla Springs a wildlife sanctuary.

"Airport ’77" & "Joe Panther" are filmed at the spring.

   Airport 77   Joe Panther

Edward Ball dies, leaving the Springs in the trust of the Edward Ball Wildlife Foundation. Due to insolvency the Nemours Foundation is appointed trustee.

The state purchases the Springs and surrounding 2,860 acres from the Nemours Foundation for $7.15 million and creates the Edward Ball Wakulla Springs State Park.

National Geographic sponsors a professional cave diving expedition into the underwater caverns for a television special.

Wakulla Springs State Park is designated a National Historic and Archaeological District.

During the renovation of the historic lodge, State Archaeologist Calvin Jones discovers archaic artifacts, confirming human presence in the area for a period of more than 12,000 years.

Friends of Wakulla Springs State Park is organized to prevent the construction of a service station on an environmentally sensitive location near the Park entrance. The State eventually purchases that property.

Hydrilla, an aquarium plant native to Sri Lanka, begins to invade the spring basin. Apple snails and the limpkin disappear.

Dive teams from Global Underwater Explorers and the Woodville Karst Plain Project conduct a world record 3.5 mile cave penetration dive. The dive teams set additional world records in the Springs during the next 7 years.

Another 3,000 acres is added to the original park acreage, including Cherokee Sink, to protect the groundwater known as the Floridan Aquifer. It is estimated that there are 18 sinkholes on Wakulla Springs State Park property.

Florida Springs Report
The Florida Springs Task Force created this document to educate the general public and to recommend strategies for the protection and restoration of Florida’s springs.

Report of the Peer Review Committee,
Solving Water Pollution Problems in the Wakulla Springshed

A workshop was convened on May 12 and 13, 2005, in Tallahassee, Florida. At this workshop, scientific and engineering experts from government agencies, academia and private industry assessed water quality problems in Wakulla Springs and River, explored their causes and consequences, and proposed solutions or mitigating strategies.

Protecting Wakulla Springs by Reducing Wastewater Nitrate Leaching
By John B. Richardson — The purpose of this study is to determine which biological effluent treatment method, wetland construction or cropland sprayfield irrigation, best reduces nitrate leaching and helps to preserve Wakulla Springs, one of Florida's most treasured tourist destinations and natural ecosystems.

In July, the Woodville Karst Plain divers established the underground connection linking the Wakulla Spring cave system to the Leon Sinks.
[Get Video]

Volunteers from the Friends assisted the State of Florida Bureau of Archaeological Research, under the direction of Dr. James Dunbar, conduct an archaeological dig at Wakulla Springs. The project received funding from The National Geographic Society.
Click here for a video you can download about this archaeological dig at Wakulla Springs! (High speed connection needed)