Augustus Steele | |
---|---|
Born | June 4, 1792 Connecticut |
Died | October 25, 1864 Wellborn, Florida |
(aged 72)
Burial place | Evergreen Cemetery (Gainesville, FL) |
Residence | |
Nationality | American |
Occupation |
|
Known for | Pioneering Florida |
Term | Florida State Legislature, 1850–1852 |
Opponent(s) | Thomas Brown |
Spouse(s) | Elizabeth Coddingham |
Augustus Steele (June 4, 1792 – October 25, 1864) was a Florida entrepreneur, a Florida state legislator, and considered the founder of Hillsborough County.
Augustus Steele was born June 4, 1792, somewhere in Connecticut.
Steele was married to Elizabeth Coddingham, about whom no information is known. He had one daughter, Augusta Florida Steele, who was born on Atsena Otie Key in 1847. Augusta received her education there by tutors including Lignoski and James Ryder Randall.
Steele had come to Florida in 1825 and was originally a settler in Northern Florida. He later helped found the town of Magnolia. The town was soon eclipsed by St. Marks, and Steele decided to move south to Fort Brooke in Tampa.
Steele came Tampa in 1830 and planned the city. Tampa at the time of Steele's arrival was only a small village. Steele suggested that there be a county there and said it should have Tampa as its county seat. Steele persuaded friends that he knew in the State Capitol, Tallahassee, and made the county 8,580 sq miles of land for Hillsborough County. During the Seminole War, Steele was given the position of postmaster at Fort Brooke. He was asked to give the news of the Dade Massacre from Fort Brooke to the governor. His town plat was invalidated by the state because it had included Fort Brooke's property.
Steele, discouraged, left Tampa after the town plat was invalidated and moved to Cedar Key. After this, Steele bought land at a Navy land auction at Atsena Otie Key and with it built a resort there. Steele wanted Atsena Otie to be a port and planned on using its deep water facilities for shipping out cotton, lumber, sugar, and tobacco from plantations inland. Steele bought all the buildings on the island for $270 (worth $6,900 in 2015) in 1843. Steele later on became Cedar Key's postmaster, Tampa & Cedar Key's port inspector, and an Internal Revenue Service collector.