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Taken from the historical marker located at the Steinhatchee Post Office:
DEADMAN BAY, STEPHENSVILLE AND STEINHATCHEE, Taylor County
Located
at the mouth of the Steinhatchee River, Deadman Bay was on Spanish maps
by the early 1500s. Spanish Conquistador Panfilo de Narvaez came
through the area in 1529 followed by Hernando de Soto ten years later.
DeSoto crossed the Steinhatchee River at the "Falls."
In 1818
General Andrew Jackson (1767-1845) also crossed at the Falls on his way
to dispatch the Seminoles who were raiding "white" settlements. In 1838
General Zachary Taylor (1784 -1850) was sent to put down the Seminoles
during the Second Seminole War. Fort Frank Brook was established up the
Steinhatchee River in the same year and abandoned in 1840. In 1879
James Howard Stephens (1825-1906), a local pioneer, offered land for a
post office changing the name from Deadman Bay to Stephensville.
In
1931 the community was renamed Steinhatchee after the river. The name
Steinhatchee was derived from the Native American "esteen hatchee"
meaning river (hatchee) of man (esteen). Steinhatchee's long history of
human habitation includes prehistoric man dating from 12,000 BC,
pirates from 15th through 18th centuries, loggers in the 1800s, sponge
divers in the 1940s and 50s and commercial fishermen, shrimpers, and
crabbers today.
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