Steamboats and regional development: The Ocklawaha and St. Johns rivers in the nineteenth century.
Authors
Storm L Richards
Jeanne Fillman-Richards
Abstract
The interior of Florida remained undeveloped until late in the nineteenth century primarily because of a lack of reliable transportation systems in North-central Florida. Railroads had been built along much of the Atlantic Coast but did not exist in the interior of Florida with the exception of the Fernandina to Cedar Key line, and the West India Transfer Railroad.