History
According to archeologist Robert Austin, the first evidence
of Native Americans on the Lake Wales Ridge dates from the Early Archaic,
about 8000 to 9000 years ago. Before then the area was probably too
barren and dry to attract people. Native American use of the Lake Wales
Ridge increased during the Middle to Late Archaic (about 2500 to 8000
years ago) when the ridge gradually became more like it is today and
lakes began to fill with water year-round. Seep springs emerged from
the ridge slopes with the increase in rainfall. Many late prehistoric
Belle Glade sites have been found around the lakes and seep springs.
Indian mounds have been found on some tracts. As far as we know, Native
Americans living on the Lake Wales Ridge did not farm or raise domesticated
animals. They lived off the natural bounty of the land: deer, gray squirrel,
alligator, gopher tortoise, fish, all kinds of aquatic turtles, and
a large number of native plants.
|

Florida Photo Archives
Hauling oranges from the interior of Florida, ca.
1912.

Florida Photo Archives
View from the Citris Tower, Clermont, February 1962.
|
A few generations ago the Lake Wales Ridge was still a
wilderness dotted with lakes and traversed by creeks and streams. The
sandhills were described as "miserable" and "good for nothing but to
get lost in." Citrus cultivation began at the end of the last century
and gradually sandhill and scrub was replaced by citrus groves. Longleaf
pine was logged for its lumber valued for boat building and housing,
and the remaining trees were tapped for rosin and turpentine. When the
railroad reached the ridge in 1887, growing fruit for export, and the
lumbering and naval stores industries increased dramatically. Railroads
also brought tourists to relax at resorts that sprang up along the region's
numerous lakes. In the 1980s devastating freezes drove the citrus industry
farther south, and many former groves were replaced with housing developments
especially geared to retirees.
During the late 1980s, a group of 40 scientists gathered
to design a system of sanctuaries that would protect what remained of
the Lake Wales Ridge. Since then local, state, federal and private organizations
including The Nature Conservancy have spent more than $75 million in
purchasing the best remaining scrub land. The Lake Wales Ridge Ecosystem
Working Group, a consortium of nonprofit organizations, federal and
state organizations, and local governments, was founded in 1991 to insure
the long-term protection of the native plants, animals, and natural
communities of this unique region of Florida.
The first acquisition of the Lake Wales Ridge Wildlife
and Environmental Area, the Lake Placid tract was purchased under the
CARL program in 1993. The former owner was August Tobler, a local cattleman.
The Lake Placid Tract had been platted as a subdivision but was acquired
from the developer before any improvements were made or lots sold.
Many of the tracts are old subdivisions and have varying
degrees of problems as a result: checkerboard ownership, dumping, and
non-native invasive plants including cogon grass and Old World climbing
fern.
|

Betsy Purdum
Hammock by the Lake, Royce Unit
|
The Royce Unit, purchased in late 2001, was a ranch owned
by the Royce family for about 70 years. Some of the land was converted
to bahia pasture for cattle and ditched for drainage beginning in the
1940s. In the late 1980s about 230 acres was converted to citrus. For
several years prior to state purchase, the Royce Ranch was an active
skeet shooting site.
The newest acquisition, the McJunkin site, adjacent to
Archbold Biological Station, was purchased in 2002. Biologists from
Archbold have been studying scrub jays on this site for over 25 years.
The area was grazed by cattle but was not converted to improved pasture
and is an important wildlife corridor between Archbold Biological Station
and the Lake Placid Scrub tract.