
Inscription. During the Second Seminole War (1835-1842), troops under the
command of Brig. Gen. Abraham Eustis left Volusia County headed toward the
Withlacoochee River as part of a military action in response to the December
28, 1835 massacre of Major Francis L. Dade and his command near Bushnell. In
March 1836 the troops camped nearby while a bridge was constructed over the
Ocklawaha to the west. They built a fortified stockade about one mile south of
this location, on the east side of Smith Lake. It was named Fort Mason, most
likely to honor Lt. Col. Pierce Mason Butler who led the expedition and after
whom Fort Butler, near Astor, was also named. After hostilities ended, Fort
Mason became a supply base to support and encourage settlement in the area, which
would later become Lake County. With the coming of the railroad in the 1880s, a
town on the north shore of Lake Eustis took its name from Fort Mason.
A Florida Heritage Site Sponsored by the Lake County Historical Society and the Florida Department of State.
A Florida Heritage Site Sponsored by the Lake County Historical Society and the Florida Department of State.
This is another in the series of markers that tell the story of Maj Francis Dade and his men that were killed in the 2nd Seminole War. Have now been to several sites for this story.


No comments:
Post a Comment