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Live Oak, Florida
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===20th century=== In the 1905 State census, Live Oak was the fifth-largest city in Florida (behind Jacksonville, Pensacola, Tampa, and Key West, in that order), and the largest inland city. Nearby resorts at [[Suwannee Springs]] and [[Dowling Park]] (formerly Hudson-upon-the-Suwannee) drew thousands of visitors from around the world to the sulfur springs and related nearby sports, boating, and hunting activities. The health benefits of the springs were touted in magazines and newspapers worldwide, supposedly curing everything from arthritis to “female problems”. During the first decade of the twentieth century, Live Oak saw a construction boom. Notable buildings such as the [[Suwannee County Courthouse]], [[Live Oak City Hall]], and Suwannee Hotel were completed. Dozens of fine two- and three-story homes were erected along the major streets. By 1913, the main streets were bricked and a sewage system had been built. [[Image:SCCC1948.jpg|thumb|upright|Suwannee County Courthouse in 1948]] Live Oak was surpassed as a destination when explosive growth occurred in south Florida. At the same time, people lost belief in the healing power of sulfur waters. Cotton crops were devastated by the [[boll weevil]] near the end of the First World War, which nearly finished off the economies of the city and county. Business stagnated with the coming of the [[Great Depression]]. But, despite their relatively small populations, Live Oak and Suwannee County remained politically powerful for another four decades. The white and rural-dominated state legislature had resisted the required redistricting that would follow demographic changes throughout the state. Finally, after a [[United States Supreme Court]] ruling in 1964 for "[[one person, one vote]]", the state legislature redistricted. Southern Florida received its due in the number of state and congressional representatives to reflect its greatly increased population in relation to other areas of the state. {{Citation needed|date=August 2024}} Ruby Strickland, former postmistress of the community of Dowling Park, was elected as mayor of Live Oak in 1924. She was the first female elected as mayor south of the [[Mason–Dixon line]] after [[universal suffrage]] was enacted in 1919. Strickland served two non-consecutive terms and represented the area at the [[Democratic National Convention of 1936]].{{Citation needed|date=August 2024}} In 1940, the men of the local National Guard unit, Company E of the 124th Infantry (historically called the [[Suwannee Rifles]]), were mustered into service for one year of training at [[Camp Blanding, Florida]].{{Citation needed|date=August 2024}} A week after the December 7, 1941 surprise Japanese attack on [[Pearl Harbor, Hawaii]], the unit was assigned to the 31st Division at [[Fort Benning]], Georgia, to serve as a model infantry training unit. The unit was briefly deactivated in 1944, but reactivated the following month after many of the original men had been dispersed to other units; members served in both the European and Pacific theaters of war during World War II.{{Citation needed|date=August 2024}} [[Florida National Guard]] historian Robert Hawk noted that, "In the course of the Second World War, no unit of the Florida National Guard had more men killed, wounded in action, or dead from other causes than Company E, 124th Infantry."{{Citation needed|date=August 2024}} The Live Oak unit was reorganized several times over the years as infantry, tank, and engineering companies; as of 2019, it served as the 868th Engineer Company. The unit has purportedly been called up to serve more than any other unit in Florida.{{Citation needed|date=August 2024}} In 1944, 15 year-old African American [[Willie James Howard]] was [[Lynching in the United States|lynched]] in Live Oak, ostensibly for having "expressed his affections" to a white girl. He was murdered by a group of white men including the girl's father, former state legislator [[A.P. "Phil" Goff]]. They kidnapped Howard, bound him, and forced him to jump off a bridge. A Suwannee County grand jury failed to indict Goff or the other white men. Media attention to Live Oak in the aftermath of the death of Willie James Howard increased awareness of [[lynching in the United States]].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theroot.com/before-emmett-till-s-death-willie-james-howard-15-wa-1790860932|newspaper=[[The Root (magazine)|The Root]]|access-date=March 8, 2018|title=Before Emmett Till's Death, Willie James Howard, 15, Was Murdered in Fla.|first=Tonya J.|last=Wethersbee|date=August 29, 2015}}</ref> In 1948, Live Oak and Suwannee County received their first public hospital. It was completed under the [[Hill-Burton Act]], which provided Federal funding for health care facilities to rural areas.{{Citation needed|date=August 2024}} The Suwannee County Hospital was initially segregated, and served only white citizens of the region until after passage of civil rights legislation in the 1960s. African Americans went to Brewster Hospital. The Suwanee County facility was replaced in the early 1990s.{{Citation needed|date=August 2024}} In 1952, national attention was drawn to Live Oak and the county when [[Ruby McCollum]], a wealthy African American, shot and killed Dr. [[Clifford Leroy Adams, Jr.]] He was a prominent, white, recently elected to the state senate. The fatal shooting took place in his medical office, across from the [[Suwannee County Courthouse]]. Investigators at first thought the shooting was related to an unpaid doctor's bill.{{Citation needed|date=August 2024}} But it was soon revealed that the married Dr. Adams had fathered a child with McCollum, who was also married. She testified that he forced her into a sexual relationship. (Adams knew that her husband Sam oversaw an illegal "[[bolita]]" gaming operation and was said to benefit by it as well). Author [[Zora Neale Hurston]] was covering the trial for the ''[[Pittsburgh Courier]]'' and characterized this abuse of an African-American woman by a powerful white man as an assertion of ''paramour rights'', which had also existed in the South under slavery.{{Citation needed|date=August 2024}} McCollum's murder conviction and death sentence were overturned on a technicality in 1954. Before a second trial, her defense attorney gained a certification that she was mentally unfit to stand trial. She was held for the next twenty years in the [[Florida State Mental Hospital]] in [[Chattahoochee, Florida|Chattahoochee]]. She was released to her family after being assessed as no danger to herself or anyone else. The murder and events surrounding it have been the subject of numerous books and documentaries in the 21st century.{{Citation needed|date=August 2024}} [[Image:Photographers in boat after Hurricane Dora - Live Oak.jpg|thumb|right|280px|Downtown Live Oak, flooded from [[Hurricane Dora (1964)|Hurricane Dora]] in 1964]] In the 1950s, the rest of Suwannee County received electricity and telephone service, something the City of Live Oak had since the late 1800s. In 1957, the [[Florida Sheriffs Association]] received property north of Live Oak for use as a Boys’ Ranch. Opening in 1958, this facility has continued to be used to help troubled boys from all of Florida; later, a Girls' Ranch and Youth Villa were constructed in other parts of the state for girls and sibling groups.{{Citation needed|date=August 2024}} In September 1964, [[Hurricane Dora (1964)|Hurricane Dora]] dumped massive amounts of water on Live Oak, flooding major intersections and leaving the downtown area partially submerged. The damage led to the abandonment or tearing down of several historic buildings and the relocation of other businesses to higher ground. In 1983, the Suwannee County Development Authority opened a park north of Live Oak along the banks of the Suwannee River. This park was little developed until being sold to private individuals in the 1990s. Renamed and developed as the [[Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park]], it hosts music festivals for all types of music, drawing hundreds of thousands of visitors to the area annually.{{Citation needed|date=July 2019}}
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