Zellwood, Florida
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Zellwood is a
census-designated place A census-designated place (CDP) is a Place (United States Census Bureau), concentration of population defined by the United States Census Bureau for statistical purposes only. CDPs have been used in each decennial census since 1980 as the counte ...
and a water control district in Orange County,
Florida Florida ( ; ) is a U.S. state, state in the Southeastern United States, Southeastern region of the United States. It borders the Gulf of Mexico to the west, Alabama to the northwest, Georgia (U.S. state), Georgia to the north, the Atlantic ...
, United States. The population was 2,850 as of 2022. It is part of the OrlandoKissimmee Metropolitan Statistical Area.


History


19th century to World War 2: T. Ellwood Zell

Zellwood is named after T. Ellwood Zell, who started spending winters in the area in 1876. The Zellwood Post Office opened in 1877. An 1881 prospectus issued by the Orange County Immigration Society advertised that " have a school, post office, and a rapidly increasing population" and that the "enlargement of the channels connecting Lakes Dora, Beauclair and Apopka" would "give us water transportation within three miles". A similar 1883 prospectus issued by the county commissioners promised that the Tavares, Orlando & Atlantic Railroad (TO&AR) was planned to pass through Zellwood, spoke of "adaptability for growing oranges, lemons, lines, etc"., and advertised land for sale in lots. Edith Fairfax Davenport's family built a home in Zellwood in 1885, and several of her paintings still reside in the Zellwood Historical Society Museum in the 21st century, including a full-size replica of
James McNeill Whistler James Abbott McNeill Whistler (; July 10, 1834July 17, 1903) was an American painter in oils and watercolor, and printmaker, active during the American Gilded Age and based primarily in the United Kingdom. He eschewed sentimentality and moral a ...
's portrait of his mother, although she herself moved to Winter Park in 1955. The James Laughlin House, known as Sydonie, was built in Zellwood in 1895 by steel heir James Laughlin Jr. But by 1940 the over-winter permanent population of the area was still just a few hundred people.


Middle to late 20th century: Boom and bust of corn

Zellwood was established legally as the Zellwood Drainage and Water Control District by act of the Florida state legislature in 1941. This was to enable marshland in the area to the north of Lake Apopka to be drained and used for agriculture. Several prior unsuccessful efforts to do this had been made, including one in the late 1800s and one in 1915. The lack of drainage meant that the low-level farmland was subject to flooding, resulting in what were termed "suitcase farmers", a succession of farmers who arrived, attempted to grow vegetables, failed, and left. The World War 2 attempt had more success, and by 1947 there were in row crops with a further being prepared. The Apopka-Beauclair Canal, dating from the aforementioned 1800s, was dredged deeper in 1958. In all, some of so-called "muck land" (soil heavy with
peat Peat is an accumulation of partially Decomposition, decayed vegetation or organic matter. It is unique to natural areas called peatlands, bogs, mires, Moorland, moors, or muskegs. ''Sphagnum'' moss, also called peat moss, is one of the most ...
and other organic deposits) were exposed. Land at Zellwood was bought by the National Ramie Corporation, the Duda family (which also owned some outside of Zellwood), and Richard Whitney and by 1950 newspapers were hailing a "wealthy new frontier of truck crop production". In 1967, sweetcorn producers banded together as the Zellwood Sweet Corn Exchange, a sales coöperative. By 1977, Zellwood was producing 20% of all the sweetcorn produced in Florida, as well as leaf crops, radishes, carrots, celery, beans, cauliflower, cabbage, eggplant, cucumbers, artichokes, beetroot, and watermelon. Roughly 20 producers were growing sweetcorn over , selling between 2.5 and 3 million crates mostly during a 5-to-6-week period in the Spring. By the 1980s, there was a Zellwood Sweet Corn Festival and famers in Florida were selling 11.5 million crates in up to three harvests per annum, to a value of approximately . At the peak of the boom, there were 35 large and small farms in the area. Ralston Purina was growing mushrooms in a huge complex nearby. The Zellwood Sweet Corn Festival was organized by the North West Orange County Improvement Association (NWOCIA), and held the weekend after the May corn harvests. It had begun as a community corn boil fundraiser in 1968, renamed to the Zellwood Sweet Corn Festival in 1973 and hosted initially at Zellwood Station and then in the NWOCIA's own building on Ponkan Road in Zellwood. Its signature "Big Bertha" corn cooker was designed by a local plumber, Bob Harper of Orlando, and built in Texas. Farmers began using pesticides such as DDT as early as 1947, when there was an infestation of corn earworms. After DDT was banned in 1972, farmers switched to other
organochloride Organochlorine chemistry is concerned with the properties of organochlorine compounds, or organochlorides, organic compounds that contain one or more carbon–chlorine bonds. The chloroalkane class (alkanes with one or more hydrogens substituted ...
pesticides, which themselves were later banned in the 1970s and 1980s. Outside of the growing season, farmers flooded their lands with lakewater to control pests and to ensure that the soil was not oxygenated. When growing season commenced, they would pump the water back into the lake, which would transport the fertilizers and pesticides that they had sprayed from the last season into the lake. Some of polluted water, roughly one third of the lake's capacity, was discharged by farms into the lake. This had devastating effects both on wildlife and on people. Fish and native plant populations in the lake died, alligators were born deformed because of endocrine disruption, algae bloomed, and workers became ill. The alligator population shrank over the course of the 1980s from between 1,200 and 2,000 alligators per night observed by research biologists from the University of Florida to just 150 per night. Even the lake itself shrank, going from the second largest in Florida to the fourth as muck and silt built up on the lakebed. The lake, which had had a reputation as one of the best fishing lakes in the United States back in the 1950s, no longer supported recreational fishing at all. In 1951 there had been 13 fish camps on the southern edge of the lake, where 10,000 bass had been caught that year (according to newspaper reports). In 1981 they were all closed. In 1996, the state of Florida began a programme of purchasing the mucklands farms and shutting them down. The St John's River Water Management District and the United States Department of Agriculture together purchased almost all of them in the period from 1998 to 2001, with physical reclamation of the land beginning in 1998. This displaced some 2,500 mostly African American farmworkers. African Americans had been working the farms ever since the 1940s; sometimes involuntarily. Apopka had passed two laws that affected African American residents: the first in 1937 a
Jim Crow The Jim Crow laws were state and local laws introduced in the Southern United States in the late 19th and early 20th centuries that enforced racial segregation, " Jim Crow" being a pejorative term for an African American. The last of the ...
law that prevented African Americans living or running businesses north of the TO&AR railway tracks, and the second in 1941 an anti-
vagrancy Vagrancy is the condition of wandering homelessness without regular employment or income. Vagrants usually live in poverty and support themselves by travelling while engaging in begging, waste picker, scavenging, or petty theft. In Western ...
law that prohibited males 18 or older from loitering. As the Masonic hall on the corner of Central Avenue and Ninth Street in Apopka was a favourite hangout for the African American community at the time, it was a regular occurrence initially for the local sheriff to pull up and offer "vagrants" the choice of joining the Army, going to jail, or working on the muck farms. These workers had been exposed long-term to the pesticides, both directly as they worked in the farms when planed sprayed overhead and indirectly as their diet comprised locally produced food, with little recourse. Oral accounts reported that workers were sprayed sometimes three times per week. Agricultural workers were not unionized, Florida having been a right to work state since 1944, and in the initial decades pesticide use was almost wholly unregulated. Little was also known at the time about long-term exposure effects of pesticides. Although regulations were later brought in, they were difficult to put into practice. Most agricultural workers lived in unregulated housing on the farms; a 1971 legislative committee report estimating 22,276 out-of-state workers living in non-permitted labour camps in Florida. Florida lacked the funds and the manpower to inspect these camps, and ensure that they complied with the then existing health and sanitation regulations, and records show that out of 407 such camps in Florida as a whole, only 259 had permits. Many labourers were invisible to even local town residents, as they lived in isolated employer-owned camps next to the fields, that would also be exposed to the pesticide spraying which would drift over them from the fields. Although there were regulations about the minimum time that must pass before workers could reenter fields after spraying, the fact that their homes were also affected meant that these had little effect in practice. The unemployed farmworkers fared badly. They initially receiving no money at all, from when the state auctioned off the purchased farm tools and equipment; after lobbying from the Farm Worker Association of Florida some money was allocated towards community centres and retraining, although many of the permanent resident workers who lived in nearby Apopka were elderly and physically unfit for what alternative work was offered to them. (Other, migrant and primarily Hispanic, workers had returned to Florida the next season to simply find no farm jobs and had switched to working in the construction and landscaping industries that had been booming in the late 1990s.) No health studies were performed on the long term impacts of the pesticides on these residents, and over the course of the subsequent decade many simply died. After grass-roots lobbying by the farmworkers themselves, including two commemorative quilts and protests outside of environmental and legislative meetings, the state legislature allocated for the "farm-worker clinic" in Apopka in a budget item sponsored by Gary Siplin, which was vetoed by
Rick Scott Richard Lynn Scott ( Myers; born December 1, 1952) is an American attorney, businessman, politician, and United States Navy, Navy veteran serving as the Seniority in the United States Senate, senior United States senator from the state of F ...
, twice: in both 2011 and 2012.


21st century: Zellwood Corn now in Mount Dora

Sweet corn from Zellwood is now consigned to history, the Zellwood Sweet Corn Festival, which was still held every year until 2013, having switched to entirely out-of-Zellwood produce grown on sand farms rather than the Zellwood mucklands in 1998. Even so, by 2017, only one such sand farm (located in Mount Dora rather than in Zellwood) was left growing Zellwood-branded corn, a brand that it had adopted in 2001, selling the now comparatively expensive to produce corn as a luxury corn brand to restaurants rather than retail outlets. The brand owners, Long and Scott Farms, had hosted the Zellwood Sweet Corn Festival until 2013. It had had various hiatuses up to that point, with both Big Berthas on display in 2011 but not operational, and the festival not held at all in 2009. A replacement Mount Dora Corn Festival was begun in 2024. The commemorative quilts were the Lake Apopka Farmworker Memorial Quilt Project, two hand-sewn quilts made by members of the erstwhile African American farmworker community. Each quilt panel memorialized someone who had died working on the farm, sometimes representing them at work but othertimes representing them doing what they enjoyed in life, such as fishing, cooking, or reading. In 2012 they went on tour around various workshops and conferences on environmental justice.


Geography

Zellwood is located at (28.723839, −81.593219). According to the
United States Census Bureau The United States Census Bureau, officially the Bureau of the Census, is a principal agency of the Federal statistical system, U.S. federal statistical system, responsible for producing data about the American people and American economy, econ ...
, the CDP has a total area of 10.5 km (4.1 mi2), of which 10.1 km (3.9 mi2) is land and 0.5 km (0.2 mi2) (4.42%) is water.


Demographics

As of the
census A census (from Latin ''censere'', 'to assess') is the procedure of systematically acquiring, recording, and calculating population information about the members of a given Statistical population, population, usually displayed in the form of stati ...
of 2000, there were 2,540 people, 1,239 households, and 795 families residing in the CDP. The
population density Population density (in agriculture: Standing stock (disambiguation), standing stock or plant density) is a measurement of population per unit land area. It is mostly applied to humans, but sometimes to other living organisms too. It is a key geog ...
was 252.1/km (653.3/mi2). There were 1,409 housing units at an average density of 139.9/km (362.4/mi2). The racial makeup of the CDP was 93.62%
White White is the lightest color and is achromatic (having no chroma). It is the color of objects such as snow, chalk, and milk, and is the opposite of black. White objects fully (or almost fully) reflect and scatter all the visible wa ...
, 2.83%
African American African Americans, also known as Black Americans and formerly also called Afro-Americans, are an Race and ethnicity in the United States, American racial and ethnic group that consists of Americans who have total or partial ancestry from an ...
, 0.31% Native American, 0.04% Asian, 2.09% from other races, and 1.10% from two or more races.
Hispanic The term Hispanic () are people, Spanish culture, cultures, or countries related to Spain, the Spanish language, or broadly. In some contexts, Hispanic and Latino Americans, especially within the United States, "Hispanic" is used as an Ethnici ...
or Latino of any race were 9.09% of the population. There were 1,239 households, out of which 9.5% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 55.8% were
married couples Marriage, also called matrimony or wedlock, is a culturally and often legally recognised union between people called spouses. It establishes rights and obligations between them, as well as between them and their children (if any), and b ...
living together, 5.6% had a female householder with no husband present, and 35.8% were non-families. 32.1% of all households were made up of individuals, and 23.8% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.00 and the average family size was 2.43. In the CDP, the population was spread out, with 11.1% under the age of 18, 3.8% from 18 to 24, 15.4% from 25 to 44, 21.0% from 45 to 64, and 48.7% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 64 years. For every 100 females, there were 86.5 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 84.6 males. The median income for a household in the CDP was $29,300, and the median income for a family was $34,468. Males had a median income of $24,091 versus $20,378 for females. The
per capita income Per capita income (PCI) or average income measures the average income earned per person in a given area (city, region, country, etc.) in a specified year. In many countries, per capita income is determined using regular population surveys, such ...
for the CDP was $22,683. About 6.6% of families and 11.9% of the population were below the
poverty line The poverty threshold, poverty limit, poverty line, or breadline is the minimum level of income deemed adequate in a particular country. The poverty line is usually calculated by estimating the total cost of one year's worth of necessities for ...
, including 23.8% of those under age 18 and 4.2% of those age 65 or over.


Footnotes


References


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United States and Florida governments

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Further reading

* * * * * * () * * * * {{authority control Unincorporated communities in Orange County, Florida Census-designated places in Orange County, Florida Greater Orlando Census-designated places in Florida Unincorporated communities in Florida