Beach Sunset

Beach Sunset

Chuluota Foreclosures  / Chuluota Homes and  Chuluota Land and Lots can be found just by clicking the underlined link. We offer some of the most beautiful  Homes in the area and are excited that you are considering moving to our town. We have provided you with a searchable data base of available Chuluota Florida Foreclosures Real Estate and Property for Sale and also Rentals. While your on our site don’t forget to order your Free Chuluota Florida Relocation Guide. Take the time to check out the links on our site, we have tried to provide you with everything you need to get started. Need a Mortgage we can help. Chuluota Florida is the place to be and we can help you get here. By the way the guy on the beach is not me but it could be you just call Pat Odor with All USA Realty at 877-869-5967.

 


Chuluota is pronounced “Choo-lee-oh-tah”, meaning “Isle of Pines”, “Pine Island”, or “Land of Lakes and Pines” or “beautiful place”, depending upon whom you ask. The pronunciation is a derivative of the Creek Indian word “Chuluoto”.

Chuluota was first settled soon after the Civil War. Some of the area’s first white residents were from North Carolina who came here by ox cart seeking refuge from the war, and undoubtedly encountered Seminole Indians when they arrived. They found an area teaming with fish, deer, and wild hogs. Orange groves, cattle ranches, a sawmill and turpentine production from the forests of pines were developed by settlers. A railroad provided transportation for passengers and goods.

Robert A. Mills, one of the early developers of the community, is credited with choosing the lyrical Indian name of Chuluota, which was possibly the name of the original Seminole village. About 1892 the name was continued by Henry Flagler, who created the Chuluota Land Company to sell land acquired by his Florida East Coast Railroad. Chuluota was originally laid out by Flagler and his Chuluota Land Company to compete with Orlando as the center of trade in the area. Following Flagler’s death, the land plats were mainly unused until the 1950s, when a post-war housing boom began to take place. The houses were generally small, and were used by working class Americans seeking affordable living.

The Chuluota School was established in 1898. It was a wooden one-room schoolhouse. In 1925 a more modern elementary school was built but was eventually closed in June, 1948. It later was the volunteer fire station and now serves as the home of VFW Post 10139 and is generally considered the community center.

Chuluota’s survival was challenged by several events. First, the Great Freeze of 1894-1895 virtually killed off all of the thriving citrus industry. Next, development was stalled by the bust of the Florida land boom in the 1920s and Henry Flagler’s death, and was finally devastated by the Great Depression of the 1930s. Bit by bit, the population of the hamlet dwindled. By the 1960s, new developers made plans to revitalize the community and many central Florida residents began to rediscover this little gem and began to migrate there.

Today, Chuluota struggles to maintain its rural character while providing a thriving community for its residents. It is estimated that one thousand new homes have been built in the area since 2003. Its citizens will continue to fight for a balance between development and maintaining a casual, laid-back quality of life.