William Whitaker (pioneer)
Early settler of Sarasota, Florida / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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William Henry Whitaker (c. 1821ā1888) was an American Seminole War veteran and pioneer who, under the provisions of the Armed Occupation Act, established the first permanent settlement in what is now Sarasota, Florida.[1][2] There he traded mullet with Cubans to bring the first groves of economically important oranges to the state.[3][4] He later married Mary Jane Wyatt and with her raised Nancy Whitaker, the first child recorded in what now is the county of Sarasota and a family of eleven children. His father-in-law, William Wyatt, was a constitutional delegate who helped to originate, and signed, Florida's first constitution. At the end of the Civil War, he helped Judah P. Benjamin escape to London.[2]
William Whitaker | |
---|---|
Born | c. 1821 |
Died | 1888 |
Monuments | Whitaker Gateway Park and Whitaker Bayou |
Spouse | Mary Jane Wyatt |
Children | 12 |
Relatives | Hamlin Valentine Snell (half brother), William Wyatt (father-in-law), Alexander Whitaker (descendant) |
Whitaker was an eighth-generation descendant of Jabez Whitaker, brother of Alexander Whitaker, the Jamestown colonist and theologian who baptized and performed the marriage of Pocahontas to John Rolfe.[citation needed]