Gainesville Gainesville
is a good place to live. Not far from the northern border of Florida and a
little more than an hour's drive from either coast, the city has a pleasant
climate. Although it is predominantly warm, in summer the temperature generally
drops about 20 degrees at night, in winter there are short but stimulating
cold spells, and the seasons change. In spring, the dogwoods are spectacular.
The mean temperature is 70.1 (degrees F), ranging from 57.7 in January to
81.1 in August. The average amount of sunshine per day is nearly 7.75 hours
and the annual rainfall is 49.97 inches. The coast is not so near that the
area is in much danger from tropical storms. Spanish explorers traversed
what is now Alachua County as early as 1529. Gainesville and the University
had their separate beginnings in 1853, when the first state college (the East
Florida Seminary) was founded in Ocala, and the Alachua County Commission
decided to move the county seat and build a new one on the route to be taken
by the Florida Railroad. The new city was named for General Edmund Gaines,
captor of Aaron Burr and victorious commander in the Second Seminole War.
The state college, after several moves, was merged with the Florida Agricultural
College of Lake City to form the University of Florida, which moved to Gainesville
the following year. The present urban population of the city is more than
85,000. Economic ties between the University and the city and county are
close. The University is the principal employer, and it is also involved in
the most profitable business of the area - agriculture. At least since the
sixteenth century, when the Spanish made the area the hub of their cattle
ranching, Alachua County has been a main center for agriculture in Florida.
Cattle and dairy products, poultry, vegetables, tobacco, corn, and timber
produce the greatest revenue. Several state and federal agricultural agencies
have headquarters in Gainesville, and the whole state is served by the University's
Institute of Food and Agriculture Sciences through its research and education
centers. Many of the pleasures of living in the Gainesville area are water-related.
The beaches of both coasts (quite different) are easily accessible. But it
is not necessary to leave Alachua County to enjoy fishing, swimming, sailing,
and similar sports. Of its 965 square miles, more than one in twenty is covered
in water. Many springs are within easy reach of Gainesville. These springs
and the lakes and rivers they feed have exceptionally clear, cool water, and
(usually) a white sandy floor. Some (such as Silver Springs at Ocala, about
40 miles south of Gainesville) have been developed into fullblown tourist
attractions, with underwater viewing galleries for fish watchers, cruises
in glass-bottomed boats, and water shows of various kinds. Other springs are
virtually undiscovered. Many afford opportunities for camping, swimming, canoeing,
and underwater exploration. It is not uncommon for divers to find fossils
or Indian artifacts. Tubing (drifting downriver on an inner tube) can be enjoyed
on the spring-fed Ichetucknee River. For naturalists the terrain is especially
rich in interest. There is a 280-acre wildlife sanctuary within Gainesville
itself. The Morningside Nature Center has a permanent staff of naturalists
and a varied program of activities, from natural history, farm, and folklore
courses to nature walks, craft workshops, and special events such as an old-fashioned
Fourth of July. The 57 acre Bivens Arm Nature Park is also within the city
limits. This preserve and Morningside Nature Center are managed by the Gainesville
Department of Cultural and Nature Operations, which also coordinates outdoor
and indoor activities at locations throughout the city. Headquarters
of this city department is the Thomas Center, a building of considerable interest
to architects and historians; in its pattern of growth it has been described
as a microcosm of Gainesville itself. A lively calendar of cultural events
keeps the Thomas Center and its gardens busy year round. Gainesville has
a number of drama groups. The Acrosstown Repertory Theatre performs in the
historic Baird Center, and the Constans Theatre on the UF campus is the home
of the University's Florida Players. The Gainesville Community Playhouse is
headquarters for community theater in Gainesville, and the Hippodrome, with
a fine professional company, is one of Florida's three state theaters. This
handsome, Beaux Artes style building, formerly the Gainesville post office,
now contains a main theater, a smaller cinema theater, and gallery space for
art exhibits. The new 1800 seat University of Florida Center for the Performing
Arts, on the western edge of the campus, is the area's major concert and theater
space for touring and local talent. The Samuel P. Harn Museum of Art, adjacent
to the Center for the Performing Arts, is a stunning new regional art center.
Art galleries in Gainesville also include three in the Thomas Center, the
University Gallery, and several other galleries and exhibition areas on campus.
Santa Fe Community College has a Gallery of Art and sponsors the Spring Arts
Festival in downtown Gainesville, one of the best of its kind in the Southeast.
The Gainesville Fine Arts Association sponsors shows at the Thomas Center
and in area shopping malls. There are several commercial galleries and the
Artisans' Guild, a nonprofit cooperative for local artists and craftspersons.
There is plenty of opportunity for doing as well as looking. The county
and the community college cooperate in offering noncredit courses, held in
locations all over the city, many of them in the evening. There are a number
of public golf courses and tennis and racquetball courts in Gainesville, as
well as those on the UF campus. The city is well supplied with restaurants and
movie theaters. The University provides Gainesville with major collegiate spectator
sports, and the Gatornational drag races held each spring draw large crowds.
The City of Gainesville sponsors a guest artist series and music and performing
arts series for local performers and companies at the Thomas Center. The University's
Department of Music offers local musicians opportunities to participate in
its performing groups, which range from the symphony orchestra to jazz combos.
Touring professional performers and productions are brought to Gainesville
by Student Government and other organizations. At the Reitz Union, Madrigal
Dinners are given each December in conjunction with the Department of Music.
Gainesville is served by more than 15 radio stations, including WUFT-FM,
a classical music station. There are two local commercial television channels,
and WUFT is the University-owned public television channel. Cable television
gives access to over 30 channels. The Gainesville Sun is the local newspaper,
and there are several student newspapers, the main one being the Independent
Florida Alligator. Gainesville is the home of the Florida Museum of
Natural History, a good starting place for those who want to know more about
Alachua County and to explore beyond as well as within it. It is located on
the University campus. The Matheson Historical Center serves as the Alachua
county museum and archives. Paynes Prairie State Preserve, Devil's Millhopper
State Geological Site, and San Felasco Hammock State Preserve afford opportunities
to get close to nature without leaving the boundaries of the county. Within
a radius of about 100 miles of Gainesville there are places of interest of
all kinds. Beginning with the Okefenokee Swamp (north of Gainesville) and going
clockwise, one may visit Jacksonville (with its big-city amenities and beaches),
St. Augustine (the oldest city in the United States, established by the Spanish
in 1565), Marineland, the Kennedy Space Center, Disney World and EPCOT (surely
the state's best-known tourist attraction), and Cedar Key, the picturesque
fishing village that was the western terminus of the railroad to which Gainesville
owes its existence. At Cross Creek, close to Gainesville, the home of author
Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings is preserved as a museum. Because of its hospitals
and the University, Gainesville is the state's main center for medical research
and treatment. It has four hospitals: Shands Teaching Hospital, the Veterans
Administration Hospital, Alachua General Hospital, and North Florida Regional
Medical Center. There are also clinics and nursing homes, and over 450 physicians
and surgeons and 100 dentists in private practice. There are about
100 churches in Gainesville and 15 student chapels and religious centers near
campus. The largest educational institutions in Gainesville are the University,
with an enrollment of 35,000, and Santa Fe Community College, with four campuses
and an enrollment of more than 12,000. The Alachua County School Board is
responsible for 23 elementary, 6 middle, and 6 high schools. There are also
more than a dozen private schools and the P. K. Yonge Laboratory School (K-12),
which operated in association with the University's College of Education.
Travel to and from Gainesville is easy. The main highways are Interstate
75, U.S. 441, and U.S. 301. The Gainesville Regional Airport is served by
five airlines - Delta, USAir, USAir Express, Comair, and Atlantic Southeast.
There is an Amtrack rail depot close by, at Waldo. Intercity bus service is
provided by Greyhound. Within the city a 10-route, half-hourly bus service
operates on weekdays, with hourly service on Saturdays.

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