
Apopka
City Departments
City Hall Switch Board
407-703-1700
Building Division
407-703-1713
Clerks Office
407-703-1704
Community Development
407-703-1712
Engineering 407-703-1718
Finance
407-703-1725
Fire Services
407-703-1756
Mayor's Office
407-703-1703
Parks 407-703-1744
Human Resources/Budget
407-703-1743
Police Services
407-703-1771
Public Services
407-703-1731
Recreation 407-703-1741
Utility Billing 407-703-1727
As your real estate
agent we are happy to assist your with buying and selling Apopka homes Helene
& Malte Strauss
407-416-9659
407-314-5468
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Homes
in Apopka, Real Estate for sale
   
We hope you will find our Apopka homes
and real estate
page informative, helpful and easy to navigate. We offer information on
houses for everybody interested in the Greater Orlando real estate
market. Search the MLS (Realtor Multilisting) for available
homes and
receive free email alerts on properties that come new on the market
Apopka communities:
Alexandria Place, Bear Lake,
Bent Oak, Bluegrass Estates, Brantley Place, Diamond Hill, Errol Estates,
Foxborough, Oakwater Estates, The Palms, Paradiso Park Estates, Pines of
Wekiva, Pitman Estates, Rock Springs Ridge, Sweetwater Country Club,
Sweetwater West, Traditions at Wekiva, Wekiva Club, Wekiva Preserve,
Wekiva Hills
Apopka City History
Before Apopka was "The Indoor
Foliage Capital of the World" or even before it was "The
Fern City," it was The Lodge.
From about 7500 B.C. until about the
1st century A. D. when they disappeared for reasons unknown, Indians
were believed to have lodged on the shores of Lake Apopka. Then for
about 400 years the region appears to have been uninhabited.
When the Spaniards arrived in Florida
in the 16th century, the Acuera tribe of the Timucua confederation
was said to have lived in the Apopka area, growing crops and
trading. By 1730 these natives were decimated by war and diseases
brought by the Europeans and had also disappeared.
Then early in the 19th century,
Indians again inhabited the area. There was a Seminole village on
Lake Apopka, or Ahapopka, as they spelled and pronounced it. It
remained an active village until the outbreak of the Second Seminole
War in the mid 1830s. Coacoochee (Wild Cat), one of the most famous
and influential War Chiefs, was born here and ruled as Chief of
about 200 Indians until this village was evacuated and the natives
sought refuge in the swampy areas around the St Johns.
The Armed Occupation Act of 1842
brought white settlers to the Apopka area. They received 160 acres
if they would settle them.
These Pioneers and those that
followed the Civil War from states to the north began converting the
area into what it is today.
The settlement grew, attracting
developers and settlers because of the climate and the agricultural
opportunities and becoming an important trading center in the 1850s.
The Masons' were particularly active. Orange Lodge #36 was organized
in 1857, and The Lodge building, still standing on its original site
at Alabama Avenue and Highway 441, was completed in 1859.
It was around this building that the
town grew in the 1860s and 1870s and ultimately became the Town of
Apopka City incorporated in 1882.
In 1882 the City of Apopka was
incorporated. The City limits were measured one mile in all
directions from the Masonic Lodge. The "Lodge" is still in
its original location on Main Street (US 441) and is the oldest
lodge room in continuous use in the State of Florida.
In 1912 ferns became the industry for
Apopka and soon Apopka developed the name of "Fern City".
More tropical plants were introduced to the growers in the area.
This influx of foliage took over the fern industry and the City
became known as "The Indoor Foliage Capital of the World".
The City of Apopka is located 12
miles Northwest of Orlando and encompasses an area slightly larger
than 30 square miles and a population of more than 31,000 citizens.
Progress continued and today Apopka
is still an important hub of commerce. One of the fastest-growing
cities in Orange County, it is home base to more than 45,000
citizens in the greater Apopka area.
The City has a strong mayoral form of
government. The Mayor and Commissioners are elected at large and
serve a term of four years. Council meetings are held in the Council
Chambers at City Hall (120 East Main St.) on the first Wednesday of
the month at 1:30 p.m. and the third Wednesday at 8:00 p.m.
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Apopka links
These websites might be helpful for
relocating customers.
City Hall Website
Orange
County
School
Grades & Info
Important
Phone #'s
Chamber
of Commerce
Apopka
Data PDF
Other links
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