CHAPTER I THE SANFORD GRANT AND ORANGE COUNTY. THE Sanford grant is probably the most extensive land enterprise in the State, and is very likely to become the center of a most flourishing region, unlike anything else of the kind attempted in the United States; for nowhere else is there any tract of land with a situation so peculiarly advantageous for commercial enterprises, for settlement, and for variety of products. In 1870 General Henry S. Sanford, of Connecticut, made an extensive tour through Florida, closely examining her many resources and most advantageous localities, and was so impressed with the tract which now bears his name that he effected a purchase of it. It was one of the Span- ish grants, so frequent wherever Spanish authority existed, and so famous for uncertain surveying and legal complica- tions. The tract embraces twenty-two square miles, compris- ing about thirteen thousand acres, nearly all of good qual- ity and susceptible of profitable cultivation. It lies on the south shore of Lake Monroe, a pretty little inland sea, about ten miles long by five miles upper St. John's empties, and out of John's flows. It is practically at the igation-that is, for the larger and be It is one hundred and sixty-five miles water route, as shown by the United wide, into which the which the larger St. head of the river nav- tter class of steamers. from Jacksonville by States Coast Survey, or about one hundred and ten miles on an air-line.