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City
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City | Ocoee Homes For
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The Center of Good Living |
West Oaks Mall |
Founder's Day Festival |
Starke Lake |
Ocoee High School |
Ocoee remained an isolated citrus
town isolated around Starke Lake until the 1980s.
Now, with 29,000+ residents, it has edged ahead
of Winter Park to become the third-largest city
in Orange County, behind Orlando and Apopka.
The transformation began two decades
ago, when devastating freezes destroyed thousands
of acres of citrus trees and opened West Orange
and south lake counties for development. Today,
Ocoee boasts a 1-million-square-foot regional West
Oaks Mall and at least two dozen new subdivisions
with home is all price ranges.
Ocoee’s beginnings were inauspicious.
In the mid-1850s a physician named J.D. Starke led
a group of slaves into the area and established
a camp along the western shores of the lake that
now bears his name. Capt. Bluford Sims, who hailed
from Ocoee, Tennessee arrived in 1861 and bought
50 acres from Starke. He then platted what would
become downtown Ocoee.
Through the years, Ocoee developed
into a thriving citrus-producing center. Today,
however, housing is the city’s hottest commodity.
The Florida Turnpike, the East-West Expressway and
a new Western Beltway all pass through the city,
meaning once-remote downtown Orlando is now just
a 15-minute commute.
Despite its growth, Ocoee has managed
to preserve its past. The annual Founders Day celebration,
for example, starts with a parade ands ends with
fireworks. And those who want to soak up a little
more local color may tour the Withers-Maguire House,
once a winter refuge for a Confederate general and
now a museum.
Also of interest is the is the
circa-1890 Ocoee Christian Church, with its gothic
architecture and Belgian-made stained glass windows,
as well as several vintage commercial buildings
in the original downtown are.
New residential development is
focused on the northwest side, along the S.R. 429
corridor. A new community center and senior center
are planned for the area, while a new high school,
appropriately named Ocoee High School, opened in
2006.
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