HOGTOWN SETTLEMENT / FORT HOGTOWN
Location: in the public park on corner of 34th Street
and 8th Ave
City: Gainesville
Near this site was located Hogtown, one
of the earliest settlements in Alachua County. It
was originally an Indian village which in 1824 had
fourteen inhabitants. Hogtown settlement is also
mentioned in documents of the early nineteenth
century which discuss land grants issued by the
Spanish crown during the Second Spanish Period in
Florida's history (1783-1821). In the late 1820's
Hogtown became a white settlement as American
pioneers occupied Indian land from which the
Seminoles had been removed by the terms of the
Treaty of Moultrie Creek. In 1854, the town of
Gainesville was founded on a site located a few
miles east of Hogtown. Fort Hogtown During the
Second Seminole War (1835-42), a settler's fort was
built at the Hogtown settlement near this site.
Shortly before the onset of that war, men from the
Hogtown settlement and from Spring Grove, a
community located about four miles to the west,
organized a volunteer company of mounted riflemen,
the Spring Grove Guards. Spring Grove was at that
time the seat of justice in Alachua county
(1832-1839). For several months, members of the
Guards periodically paraded and patrolled the
countryside to protect the inhabitants against
Indians. The fort at Hogtown was one of more than a
dozen Second Seminole War forts located in or near
present-day Alachua County.