Holly Hill, Florida Holly Hill, Florida City of Holly Hill The Holly Hill City Hall in 2007.

The Holly Hill City Hall in 2007.

Official seal of Holly Hill, Florida Location in Volusia County and the state of Florida Location in Volusia County and the state of Florida Holly Hill, Florida is positioned in the US Holly Hill, Florida - Holly Hill, Florida Holly Hill is a town/city in Volusia County, Florida, United States.

The populace was 11,659 at the 2010 census. Holly Hill's town/city limits lie entirely on the Florida mainland, unlike the larger metros/cities on either side of it, Daytona Beach and Ormond Beach, which encompass both the mainland and the barrier island (beach front) athwart the Halifax River.

Holly Hill is positioned at 29 14 38 N 81 2 47 W (29.243808, -81.046476). According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 4.5 square miles (12 km2), of which 3.9 square miles (10 km2) is territory and 0.6 square miles (1.6 km2) (13.94%) is water.

Holly Hill was incorporated in 1901.

Holly Hill's beginnings date back to the early 19th century, when Governor Coppinger of Spanish East Florida gave a royal title of 4,500 acres (18 km2) on the Halifax River to Fernando de la Maza Arrendonda.

The Halifax region was again abandoned until after the Civil War, but pioneer seeking a better life appeared to take favor of the natural beauty and enticing climate.

William Wallace Ross appeared here sometime in the 1860s and established a home site at a point which he called "Palmetto Point", where he established the first Holly Hill region postal service at his home, which was called the Palmetto Post Office.

When Mathias Day, founder of Daytona Beach, appeared here in May 1870, he spotted the Wimple and Ross grove behind a expansion of palmettos on the west bank of the Halifax River.

On February 26, 1958, the Holly Hill Council officially titled the point "Ross Point Park" with respect to Ross, and a marker was placed there, preserving its importance in the city's history.

It was there that Wetherell met William Simcoe, a friend from his earlier days in the city.

He was able to convince the Wetherell family that Miami was the place to be.

William Samuel Fleming, Sr., in 1876 owned most of the territory now comprising Holly Hill, and his territory holdings continued from there south through Port Orange, where he and his wife Mary lived.

In 1877 he owned 4,000 acres (16 km2) on the Halifax River between Ormond Beach and the recently settled site of Daytona and began to erect a simple frame dwelling on a portion of his riverfront property.

They were stranded in Fernandina at the far northeast tip of Florida for three weeks until Captain Charlie Fossard, who ran a freight and passenger schooner between Daytona and Fernandina, arrived.

Fortunately for Holly Hill they never instead of the trip to Miami.

Thomas Wetherell, aged nine at the time, wrote an account of their arrival in Daytona years later.

The postal service was a dry goods box that sat in the corner of William Jackson's small store at the south end of Daytona.

The Wetherells spent that first fall and winter at Daytona Beach in the woods in an old home at what then was the northeast comer of Ridgewood and Volusia Avenue but is now known as International Speedway Boulevard (U.S.

But in the spring Flemming got them to move to Holly Hill, where they bought from him the 220 feet (67 m) on Washington Avenue, now LPGA Boulevard, between Daytona Avenue and Dixie Highway, for the total of $75.

Tragedy hit the Wetherells when their fourth child, the baby girl, died very young, but two more girls were born to them in Holly Hill, Ethel and Victoria.

The Monroes were the only other family settling directly in Holly Hill at that time, living in a cottage at the site of the old town/city hall where the jail is now located.

Holly Hill at that time had no name, and in discussion among the pioneer Mrs.

This was a prominent way of naming suburbs at this time, as Ormond Beach was originally titled New Britain, after the Connecticut hometown of many of the early pioneer there.

Flemming owned nearly all the territory and was the colony founder he should have the naming privilege, despite the fact that he still lived in Port Orange.

Flemming decided to name the colony Holly Hill in memory of his Irish Holywood home, because there were lots of holly in the region and there was a bit of a rise in the terrain.

The territory was cleared just south of the Holly Hill Canal right on the river shore.

After a several years both the Monroes and the Woods left Holly Hill to return to Newport News.

The Wetherells, however, remained in the same locale for 51 years.

He was foreman on the first canal dug through Holly Hill.

The Carter and Harris families became an meaningful part of the settlement region in the late 1870s.

The earliest home still standing in Holly Hill was assembled in 1878.

William Hyde Carter, then of Passaic, New Jersey, desiring to seek a better climate, came to Florida in 1877.

The family was homed in Port Orange since there was no housing in Daytona available.

Carter had already received his home site from Mr.

December 28, work began on the orange grove, William Wetherell assisting.

Carter, her daughter Allie and two sons remained in the home, and Mrs.

Carter became the Holly Hill postmistress October 29, 1877, and held the post for 30 years.

It can be speculated that the six years between William Ross and Mrs.

Carter's posts were the years Charles Wetherell served as postmaster.

Carter died at the home in 1910 and left the home and grove to her eldest son William W.

The old Carter home was sold by Mrs.

Charles Wetherell became active in civic affairs and assembled the first church and school in 1885 on the corner of Michigan (now 6th Street) and Daytona Avenue.

Reverend Stuart-Martin, after a several years in Palatka, returned to Volusia County and assembled the three early Episcopal churches in the county in 1883: All Saints in Enterprise, St.

Wetherell served for many years in the Florida Legislature and was Speaker of the House from 1990-1992.

He served as President of Florida State University from January 6, 2003, to January 31, 2010. His brother William ("Billy") is associated with Daytona State College.

A big event in the lives of the pioneer was when the first train came through from Jacksonville to Daytona in 1887, eleven years after the Wetherells' arrival.

In the early 1880s, as other pioneer arrived, Holly Hill's name began to gain in popularity.

As of the census of 2000, there were 12,119 citizens , 5,583 homeholds, and 2,998 families residing in the city.

In the city, the populace was spread out with 19.9% under the age of 18, 7.0% from 18 to 24, 28.4% from 25 to 44, 23.5% from 45 to 64, and 21.2% who were 65 years of age or older.

The median income for a homehold in the town/city was $26,651, and the median income for a family was $29,154.

About 13.5% of families and 16.5% of the populace were below the poverty line, including 23.4% of those under age 18 and 12.1% of those age 65 or over.

Mc - Coy, lived and worked in Holly Hill as a skilled yacht builder, before to his entry into rum-running "Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics: 2010 Demographic Profile Data (DP-1): Holly Hill city, Florida".

City of Holly Hill official website Municipalities and communities of Volusia County, Florida, United States Daytona Beach Daytona Beach Shores De - Bary De - Land Deltona Edgewater Flagler Beach Holly Hill Lake Helen New Smyrna Beach Oak Hill Orange City Ormond Beach Port Orange South Daytona Alamana Allandale Barberville Bethune Beach Boden Cassadaga Cow Creek Creighton Eldora Emporia Enterprise Farmton Fort Florida Lemon Bluff Maytown Osteen Pennichaw Senyah Volusia Wilbur-by-the-Sea This populated place also has portions in an adjoining county or counties

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Cities in Volusia County, Florida - Populated places on the Intracoastal Waterway in Florida - Populated places established in 1901 - Cities in Florida