I am riding around Sunnyside anticlockwise trying to trace the railroad easement from Leesburg to Tavares. I am seeking any trace of Eldorado a small settlement on the south eastern corner of Sunnyside which in 1890 was connected by train to Leesburg and Tavares and by steamboat to Astor on the St Johns River. Eldorado even had a post office from 1886 until 1910.
I should have asked these guys the way! Blue marks the old railroad line, red is the Stivender property.
Initially I could find nothing apart from waterfront homes and docks. But
it turned out not to be a waste of time as I met a home owner who had lived
there since before the railroad tracks had been removed. He showed me the old
route behind his home and explained it went behind an old house and that I could
see more of the easement at Camp Horizon a Christian retreat further down the
road. I went to the camp, jumped a gate and was able to follow the RR easement
as far as Leesburg Airport. A lot of the early trains would have run on a
trestle in this area where later railroad companies built a causeway.
On my way back I found the old house the neighbor had mentioned - in total
disrepair. I hadn't previously seen it as the only thing visible from the road
is its windmill and water tower. The house is concealed by oaks and spanish
moss. In its early days it had been a magnificent home with a tower and widow’s
walk. I later found out that this is the Stivender house built in 1881. Dr.
Arthur Avreham Stivender (1842-1900) was born in Alabama and came to the area in
1861 with his mother Margaret Gillie Anne Lee of the founding family of Leesburg
and his siblings. He was a dentist but better known as a citrus grower on the
land around his house. On the lakefront Stivender built a dock and a packing
house where trains and steamboats would stop to transfer supplies and pick up
citrus and vegetables from all over the lake.
The no longer existing Stivender rail depot, docks and packing house and an
1895 image of the train near Eldorado.
Stivenders son was into racing cars in the early 20th century. His race
track is now what we know as Sunnyside Loop. The Stivender House was featured in
the 2009 film "Away We Go". The Seaboard Coastline Railway continued service
between Leesburg and Tavares until 1949. The house burned to the ground a few months after I wrote this article.
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