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  1. Sarasota saw extensive development during the Florida Land Boom. The population of the area around Sarasota grew from 3,000 in 1920 to over 15,000 by 1926. By the late 1920s, Sarasota was the largest city on the Gulf Coast south of St. Petersburg and Sarasota County was one of the wealthiest counties in the United States.

  2. History. The area known today as Sarasota appeared on a sheepskin Spanish map from 1763 with the word Zarazote over present-day Sarasota and Bradenton. [12] .

  3. 17 de mar. de 2022 · By Mike Miller March 17, 2022. Sarasota, like many places in the state, was originally the home of native Americans who began settling in the area about 10,000 years ago. The first Europeans to discover the area were the Spanish, who landed at Charlotte Harbor to the south in 1513.

  4. Use of the name “Sarasota” appears on the first complete maps of Florida printed by the government in 1839, 18 years after the Floridas passed to the United States following ownership by both the Spanish and the British.

  5. 16 de mar. de 2020 · From the shores of Osprey where native Floridians lived off the land for centuries before the arrival of European explorers, to the heart of downtown Sarasota, where turn-of-the-20th-century developers erected a resort paradise, there is a wealth of local history to be unearthed in Sarasota County.

  6. Sarasota was first established as a rural Spanish community that was known as Zara Zote, a name of unknown origins. As Florida changed hands between the Spanish and the English, both Cuban and American settlers fished and traded along with Havana merchants in Zara Zote's bayside fishing camps, referred to as ranchos.

  7. 15 de jul. de 2020 · How it all began ... Sarasota first became a "modern" town in the 1880s, after it was promoted in Scotland by the Florida Mortgage and Investment Co. in 1885. It was a breath of fresh air, promising an abundance of fertile land, plentiful citrus groves, and affordable housing.