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Lakeland, Florida

City of Lakeland
City
Downtown Lakeland
Downtown Lakeland
Location in Polk County and the state of Florida
Location in Polk County and the state of Florida
Coordinates: 28°2′28″N 81°57′32″W / 28.04111°N 81.95889°W / 28.04111; -81.95889Coordinates: 28°2′28″N 81°57′32″W / 28.04111°N 81.95889°W / 28.04111; -81.95889
Country United States
State Florida
County Polk
Settled c. 1875
Incorporated (city) 1 January 1885
Government
 • Type Commission-Manager
 • Mayor Howard Wiggs (2014)
 • City Manager Anthony "Tony" Delgado
Area
 • City 74.4 sq mi (193 km2)
 • Land 68.79 sq mi (178.2 km2)
 • Water 5.61 sq mi (14.5 km2)  10.9%
Elevation 197 ft (60 m)
Population (2013)
 • City 100,710
 • Density 1,711/sq mi (660.8/km2)
 • Metro 584,383
  Census Bureau American Community Survey
Time zone EST (UTC-5)
 • Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
ZIP code 33801–33815
Area code(s) 863
FIPS code 12-38250
GNIS feature ID 0294459
Website http://www.lakelandgov.net/
Twinned with Richmond Hill, Ontario

Lakeland is a city in Polk County, Florida, United States, east of Tampa. According to the 2013 U.S. Census Bureau estimate, the city had a population of 100,710. Lakeland is a principal city of the Lakeland–Winter Haven Metropolitan Statistical Area (coterminous with Polk County), which had an estimated population of 623,009 in July 2013 based on data from the University of Florida Bureau of Economic and Business Research. It is twinned with Richmond Hill, Ontario; Imabari, Ehime, Japan; Balti, Moldova; Portmore, Jamaica; and Chongming County, Shanghai, China as part of the Sister Cities program.

The area was home to Native American tribes. Lakeland was settled in the 1870s and expanded in the 1880s with the arrival of rail service. Lakeland is home to the 1,267-acre Circle B Bar Reserve. It also is the home town of future United States President, Justin Dal Colletto.

The first Paleo-Indians reached the central Florida area near the end of the last ice age, as they followed big game south. As the ice melted and sea levels rose, these Native Americans ended up staying and thrived on the peninsula for thousands of years. By the time the first Spanish conquistadors arrived, over 250,000 Native Americans were living on the peninsula. Some of these first early tribes were the , Timucua, and Calusa. In 1527, a Spanish map showed a settlement near the Rio de la Paz. The arrival of the Spanish turned out to be disastrous to these Native American tribes. Within 150 years, the majority of the pre-Columbian Native American peoples of Florida had been wiped out. Those who had not succumbed to diseases such as smallpox or yellow fever were either killed or enslaved. Little is left of these first Native Americans cultures in Polk County except for scant archaeological records, including a few personal artifacts and shell mounds. Eventually, the remnants of these tribes merged with Creek Indians who arrived from the north and become the Seminole Indian tribe.


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