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neighborhood, whose influence shall be felt far beyond its own limits.
During this year Mrs. Stowe partially carried her plan into execution by hiring an old plantation called Laurel grove, on the west side of the St. John's River, near the present village of Orange Park.
Here she established her son Frederick as a cotton planter, and here he remained for two years. This location did not, however, prove entirely satisfactory, nor did the raising of cotton prove to be, under the circumstances, a profitable business.
After visiting Florida during the winter of 1866-67, at which time her attention was drawn to the beauties and superior advantages of Mandarin on the east side of the river, Mrs. Stowe writes from Hartford, May 29, 1867, to Rev. Charles Beecher--
My dear brother ,--We are now thinking seriously of a place in Mandarin much more beautiful than any other in the vicinity.
It has on it five large date palms, an olive tree in full bearing, besides a fine orange grove which this year will yield about seventyfive thousand oranges.
If we get that, then I want you to consider the expediency of buying the one next to it. It contains about two hundred acres of land, on which is a fine orange grove, the fruit from which last year brought in two thousand dollars as sold at the wharf.
It is right on the river, and four steamboats pass it each week, on their way to
Savannah and
Charleston.
There is on the place a very comfortable cottage, as houses go out there, where they do not need to be built as substantially as with us.