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Moultrie Creek

Also see Moultrie Trace   Moultrie Trails

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Moultrie Creek real estate and neighborhood inofrmation  Moultrie Trace homes for sale  Moultrie Trails homes for sale and neighborhood photo tour

Located ten minutes south of downtown St Augustine off US1, the Moultrie Creek neighborhood has a mixture of sub divisions and individual homes that vary from waterfront homes to custom homes and lower priced sub division housing. The area is heavily wooded with many large oak trees. Many homes are on 1/4 and 1/2 acre lots and there are some with larger plots.

The Moultrie area is named for John Moultrie, lieutenant governor of Florida during the British Period.

Moultrie built a plantation, Bella Vista, on the north side of Moultrie Creek in what is now St. Augustine South. Moultrie supervised the construction of the King's Road from St. Augustine south to New Smyrna. The road was completed in 1774 and was located just west of the Moultrie area.

During the First Spanish Period, Moultrie Creek was known as Cano San Nicholas; the British called it Woodcutter's Creek for their extensive timber operations in the area. A vibrant agricultural community grew up along the creek, containing vineyards and a winery, a sawmill, turpentine camp, citrus groves and small farms. The Moultrie Church was built in 1877 as a Methodist Episcopal Church on land donated by William C. Middleton, an early settler of the area.

The cemetery adjacent to the church contains the graves of many pioneer families who settled the Moultrie area -- Barnes, Bradfisch, Cubbedge, Fuquay, Genung, Green, Hagan, Mahr, Oliver, Osteen, and Simms. The Vaill family purchased property in Moultrie in 1915, and the Vaill Point area now bears their name.

During the 1920s, Moultrie was a very active community with its own post office, library, Chamber of Commerce and Farmer's Association.

A Bit of Seminole History

The Treaty of Moultrie Creek was an agreement signed in 1823 between the government of the United States and several chiefs of the Seminole Indians in the present-day state of Florida. The United States had acquired Florida from Spain in 1821 by means of the Adams-Onís Treaty. In 1823 the government decided to settle the Seminoles on a reservation in the central part of the territory. A meeting to negotiate a treaty was scheduled for early September 1823 at Moultrie Creek, south of St. Augustine. About 425 Seminoles attended the meeting, choosing Neamathla, a prominent Mikasuki chief, to be their chief representative. Under the terms of the treaty negotiated there, the Seminoles were forced to place themselves under the protection of the United States and to give up all claim to lands in Florida, in exchange for a reservation of about four million acres (16,000 km˛). The reservation would run down the middle of the Florida peninsula from just north of present-day Ocala to a line even with the southern end of Tampa Bay. The boundaries were well inland from both coasts, to prevent contact with traders from Cuba and the Bahamas. Neamathla and five other chiefs, however, were allowed to keep their villages along the Apalachicola River.

Under the Treaty of Moultrie Creek, the United States government was obligated to protect the Seminoles as long as they remained peaceful and law-abiding. The government was supposed to distribute farm implements, cattle and hogs to the Seminoles, compensate them for travel and losses involved in relocating to the reservation, and provide rations for a year, until the Seminoles could plant and harvest new crops. The government was also supposed to pay the tribe US$5,000 a year for twenty years, and provide an interpreter, a school and a blacksmith for the same twenty years. In turn, the Seminoles had to allow roads to be built across the reservation and had to apprehend any runaway slaves or other fugitives and return them to United States jurisdiction.

Vaill Point Road Photo Tour

Vaill Point Road is off the east side of US1 alongside of the actual creek. There are both average homes and upscale residences in this area. Below are photos of the area. Click on photos for larger views.

Examples of Homes
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