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New Smyrna Statistics
Voted Florida's Best Beach

Martha and Don Woods

New Smyrna is a Quality City

"New Smyrna is a quality city with its character remaining despite additions," said Mayor Vandergrifft. For this city with a year-round population of 21,000 (with an extra 10,000 seasonal residents and a weekend influx of 3,000), the additions are impressive.

New Smyrna Beach is home to the internationally renowned Atlantic Center for the Arts, a non-profit interdisciplinary artists-in-residence community and arts education facility. The center provides mid-career artists an opportunity to work and collaborate with some of the world's most distinguished contemporary artists in the fields of composition and visual, literary, and performing arts. It houses an art gallery, an amphitheater, workshops, studios and residencies for the artists.

The city also has two award winning commercial redevelopment districts and is currently constructing or developing two new community centers, a sports complex, two environmentally sensitive parks, three new water oriented parks and a municipal boardwalk.

Of course, these add-ons don't take away from the natural beauty of the area or the city's textured history.

New Smyrna Beach is touted as a small town with the sophisticated ambiance of a seaside resort and its 13 miles of coast are reputed to be the "World's Safest Bathing Beach." Water activities abound - the surfing is said to be the best in the area and the fishing is described as first-class.

The prime recreational areas are equally well known for their marinas, restaurants, shops and unique lodging opportunities. The numerous boutiques and historic bed and breakfast inns along Riverside Drive are all part of a redevelopment plan that has revitalized the city while paying special attention to preserve its numerous historical monuments.

New Smyrna Beach is proud to be the third oldest settlement in Florida. The name "New Smyrna" was given by the city's founder, Dr. Andrew Turnbull, to honor his wife, whose birthplace was Smyrna (now Izmir), Turkey. The New Smyrna colony, settled in 1268, was the site of the largest British attempt at colonization in the New World.

Dr. Turnbull acquired the land in 1763, when the Spanish ceded Florida to the British and large land grants and bounties were offered to encourage colonization.

That same year, Dr. Turnbull sailed to Greece, Italy and Minorca to recruit settlers for his new colony. In the summer of 1768, after a three-month journey in which 148 settlers were buried at sea, Dr. Turnbull's ships arrived in St. Augustine and the remaining settlers continued by land and by sea to New Smyrna.

With a population of around 1500, the colony was three times the size of the Jamestown colony. But, the colony had problems from the beginning. Religious differences, drought, political problems, supply shortages, hard labor and an abundance of mosquitoes quickly whittled the population down to 600. In 1777, once the colonists' indenture contracts ran out, many fled to St. Augustine, leaving behind the miles of irrigation and drainage canals they built that are still in use today.

In 1784, the Spanish returned to Florida and encouraged immigration by offering land grants as the English had, but Native American uprisings became so frequent that New Smyrna became Fort New Smyrna. For a period of time, troops were the city's only residents.

In 1835, New Smyrna was designated the county seat of "Mosquito County." The community was destroyed during the second Seminole Indian War.

The community was rebuilt and was the site of a Civil War encounter that left eight people dead. After the Civil War, the community was again repaired and in 1877, the town was organized and incorporated. In 1947, the cities of New Smyrna and Coronado Beach were merged and New Smyrna Beach was formed.

The city utilizes the commission-manager form of government, which was adopted in 1921. Mayor Vandergrifft serves on the commission along with four other citizens, all elected in citywide elections. Currently, Mayor Vandergrifft, Vice Mayor William Rogers and Commissioners James Hathaway, Jo Ann O'Bannon and Oretha Bell makeup the City Commission.

For more information, contact the Southeast Volusia Chamber of Commerce at (800) 541-9621 or visit the Web site, Chamber of Commerce.

by: Robyn Lewis is publications assistant for the Florida League o f Cities.

from: Quality Cities - November/December 2000

- Contact us for -

- Legendary Quality Service -
Don Woods, REALTOR®, GRI, e-PRO

Watson Realty Corp., REALTORS®

Phone Direct: 386-478-9202

Direct Toll free: 877-281-7432

Fax: 386-423-0110

Email:MarthaDon@newsmyrnabeachfront.com

 

Revised: March 09, 2009.


Watson Realty

1504 S Atlantic Ave.

New Smyrna Beach

 FL 32169

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