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===Early European Pioneers and Founding=== Roughly 100 settlers and over 50 slaves arrived in what would become Hernando County in February 1842.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Landers |first1=Roger R. |title=The "Recent Unpleasantness" in Hernando County, Florida: Reconstruction, Redemption, Retrenchment, and Its Legacy |journal=Tampa Bay History |date=2010 |volume=24 |issue=1 |page=13 |url=https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1504&context=tampabayhistory |access-date=March 24, 2023}}</ref> Fort DeSoto was soon established in the northeast edge of present-day [[Brooksville, Florida|Brooksville]] to protect these settlers in the area from Native Americans. The fort became a small community center, trading post, and way station on the route to [[Tampa, Florida|Tampa]]. Further settlements started to grow near the fort beginning around 1845; two towns developed, Melendez and Pierceville, which would later merge to create Brooksville in 1856.<ref name="Brooksville History">{{cite web |title=About |url=https://www.cityofbrooksville.us/about |website=City of Brooksville |access-date=April 12, 2021 |archive-date=May 8, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200508050124/https://www.cityofbrooksville.us/about |url-status=dead }}</ref> Then encompassing a significantly larger area of west central Florida than it does today, Hernando County was officially established on February 27, 1843, two years prior to Florida's admission into the Union. It was created from portions of Alachua, Hillsborough and Orange Counties and included all of present-day Citrus and Pasco Counties. Named for [[Spain|Spanish]] [[List of explorers|explorer]] [[Hernando de Soto]],<ref>{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_9V1IAAAAMAAJ | title=The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States | publisher=Govt. Print. Off. | author=Gannett, Henry | year=1905 | pages=[https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_9V1IAAAAMAAJ/page/n154 155]}}</ref> whose name has also been honored in [[DeSoto County, Florida|DeSoto County]], Hernando County was briefly renamed Benton County in 1844 for [[Thomas Hart Benton (senator)|Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton]], a strong supporter of territorial expansion who aided in the county's creation. However, Benton fell out of favor with the county's residents later in the decade due to his decision to support the [[Missouri Compromise]] and the overall reversal of his stance on slavery, and the county's name reverted in 1850. In December 1854, the legislature designated the small port town of [[Bayport, Florida|Bayport]] the county seat. Residents living in the eastern section of the county instead desired a more central place for the county government, and by 1855, voters had selected an inland site within {{convert|5|mi|km|spell=in}} of the center of the county at the town of Melendez. In 1856, the citizens of Hernando County chose to rename the town, their new County Seat, [[Brooksville, Florida|Brooksville]] in honor of [[Preston Brooks|South Carolina Representative Preston Brooks]], who in the same year beat fierce abolitionist [[Charles Sumner|Massachusetts Senator Charles Sumner]] with a cane in the Senate chambers, winning the Congressman great renown in the South. In 1855, town founder Joseph Hale donated land for a county courthouse in the center of present-day Brooksville. Soon thereafter, the structure was completed.
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