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Miccosukee United Methodist Church

About 18 miles northeast of Tallahassee, Miccosukee United Methodist Church was built around 1876 in the rural crossroads of Miccosukee. This simple wood frame building was constructed on donated land. The historical perspective of the area is like many other once thriving towns in Florida. 

In 1778 the British mapped this once thriving community, originally called “Mikasuki”, with “sixty houses, a square, 28 families and 70 gunmen”. The village was first settled by Native Americans of Creek descent who were often in armed conflict with white settlers. In 1818 Andrew Jackson and his men invaded, defeating the forces of village leader Kinhagee. Most of the Native Americans fled, but the area’s fertile soil drew settlers and the area was soon resettled. A U.S. Post Office was built in 1831, as were churches, schools, and general stores. The town became a prime location for some of the area’s largest cotton plantations. After the Civil War, agriculture remained the mainstay, and by 1887 a railroad served the community. In the 1890s, wealthy northern industrialists began purchasing large tracts of land to use as winter quail hunting estates, taking thousands of acres of land out of agricultural production. Yet the community continued to thrive until the boll weevil insect infestation of 1916 and the Great Depression (1929-1935) destroyed Leon County’s agricultural base. The rail line ceased operations by the mid-1940s, leaving the Miccosukee community of today rich in turn-of-the-century charm.


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