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City
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County | Wikipedia
City | Winter Garden
Homes
Downtown - Plant Street
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Lake Apopka |
Heritage Museum |
West Orange Trail |
Winter Garden Village
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It was 1857 when Becky Roper Stafford’s
great-great-grandfather first glimpsed at Lake Apopka.
W.C. Roper was riding through the backwoods of west
Orange County on horseback, seeking a place to build
a home for his family waiting back in Merriwether
County, GA.
Roper bought 600 acres along the
shore, between present-day Winter Garden and Oakland,
and returned a year later with his wife and 10 children.
The ambitious settler operated a sawmill, gristmill,
sugar mill and cotton gin. Later he built a tannery
for making shoes, and served as Orange County’s
superintendent of schools from 1873 to 1877.
Fast-forward to the 1920s, when
Roper’s son Frank planted the area’s
first orange trees, making the humble beginnings
of an industry that would sustain and define Winter
Garden, which had been incorporated in 1903, for
the next six decades.
Fast-forward again to the 1980s,
when devastating freezes destroyed thousands of
acres of citrus. Roper Growers Cooperative, Heller
Brothers and Louis Dreyfus Citrus eventually recovered.
But as growers regrouped or retreated, once-bustling
downtown Winter Garden became a virtual ghost town.
Concurrently, developers began
buying up decimated groves for new homes, creating
new subdivisions seemingly overnight. But most of
the residential growth, and the retail growth that
followed, was outside the city, which made Winter
Garden proper even more of an anachronism.
Then came a brilliant project called
Rails to Trails, through which abandoned rail beds
across the country were converted into hiking and
biking trails.
The popular West Orange Trail passes
directly through Winter Garden, thus converting
the all-but-forgotten city into an oasis for thousands
of ready-to-spend strollers. In fact, city officials
estimate that the trail is responsible for generating
about 50,000 downtown visitors per month.
And most are charmed by what they
see. In 2001 the tired downtown district underwent
a facelift. Brick streets were restored, old buildings
were remodeled, and Centennial Fountain, saluting
the city’s citrus-growing heritage, was constructed.
And locals proudly note that Winter
Garden has two historical museums open seven days
a week. There’s the Central Florida Railroad
Museum and the Heritage Museum, both housed in restored
depots. History buffs may also stroll around the
city and view such landmarks as the 1860s-era Beulah
Baptist Church.
And redevelopment is on a roll:
Stafford is hard at work with the Winter Garden
Heritage Foundation to renovate to historic Garden
Theater on Plant Street, which will become a 300-sear
performing arts center.
While the old downtown is re-emerging
as a force to be reckoned with, several miles south
a 1.15-million-square-foot open-air mall called
Winter Garden Village at Fowler Groves is set to
open soon. More than 40 new home communities are
currently under way within Winter Garden’s
city limits. And the city plans to annex a large
tract of mostly undeveloped land from its western
boundary south of Florida’s Turnpike to the
Lake County line. The tract contains 1,300 developable
acres that could eventually contain 3,600 homes.
To the south of downtown, along
C.R. 535 and S.R. 545, communities totaling 25,000
homes are expected to be built where citrus groves
once flourished.
The biggest of the new developments
is Horizon West, a 38,000-acre master-planned community
that has been in the planning stages for a decade.
At buildout, its two villages – Bridgewater
and Lakeside – will contain nearly 18,000
homes.
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