Paradise was an unincorporated community in
Alachua County, Florida
Alachua County ( ) is a county in the north central portion of the U.S. state of Florida. As of the 2020 census, the population was 278,468. The county seat is Gainesville, the home of the University of Florida since 1906, when the campus ope ...
, United States. It has been annexed into the city of
Gainesville, and is located approximately where
Alachua County Road 232 (N.W. 39th Avenue) crosses
U.S. Route 441.
The area around Paradise was settled in the 1830s. A station was built on the recently completed
Savannah, Florida and Western Railway
The Plant System named after its owner, Henry B. Plant, was a system of railroads and steamboats in the U.S. South, taken over by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad in 1902. The original line of the system was the Savannah, Florida and Western R ...
line between
High Springs
High Springs is a city in Alachua County, Florida, United States. It is the fourth-largest city in Alachua County and seventh-largest in North Central Florida. The population was 6,215 at the 2020 census.
History
The present-day area of High S ...
and Gainesville in 1885, and named Paradise after one of the farm fields in the area. By 1888 the community included some twenty houses, the railroad station and a school. A post office was established in 1885, and closed in 1908. Part of the area of Paradise was annexed into Gainesville in 1961. The remainder of Paradise was annexed into Gainesville in 1992.
References
Unincorporated communities in Alachua County, Florida
Unincorporated communities in Florida
{{AlachuaCountyFL-geo-stub