With real trees too, not the twigs that the developer plants after they clear cut the entire subdivision. Back in 1925, Telfair Stockton clear cut Avondale, but hey, 85 years later with mature trees everywhere, who would know this without looking at pictures?
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I can tell you that Riverside & Avondale was not, generally speaking, clear cut of hardwoods. I could find you numerous 100-300 year old hardwoods in the n'hood (magnolias, live oaks, sweetgums, hickories and others). The difference is that this area was not planted pine back at the turn of the 1900's. Much was pasture and natural hardwood hammocks. I'm sure most of the longleaf pine was cut and used on site. Not much shipping of the lumber to build many of these homes, I'm assuming. Trees are America's renewable resource!
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How many are aware that T.Stockton and J.T.Butler first floated the idea of a "consolodated" Duval county.......in the mid/late 1920's......a legislative resolution voted down by Duval voters?
Imagining the Avondale area....a "mental model".......is interesting.I reside on the banks of Big Fishweir Creek....the official southwesterly boundary of RAP........on the side of a sandhill,with 'seepage slopes' and certain elevation change on down to the creek....as seen in Jennings State Forest.
We have an elderly neighbor who recalls her children hunting the 'hood.
Brannon/Chaffee/Oaleaf (including former Trust For Public Lands parcel) "Planners & Consultants" where able to win the transformation of the area during "public workshop" by promoting "Avondale/Riverside" type during "vision".
It will not be the same.It can not be the same.The 'best' places were selected a long time ago.