The area was first inhabited over 7,000 years ago by Native Americans attracted to a warm mineral spring. The
hydrological spring, locally known as the "Original
Fountain of Youth", attracted patrons in the 19th century to the
spa town, where more than a dozen hotels were built near the spring to accommodate them. Today, the
sulfur-scented spring water feeds an adjacent public swimming pool before flowing the short distance to the St. Johns River. The Green Cove Springs area was first developed by
George J. F. Clarke in 1816 when he was provided land, under a Spanish land grant, to build a sawmill. Green Cove Springs was established in 1854 as White Sulfur Springs. Renamed in 1866, it became the Clay County seat in 1871. Agriculture and tourism were the two primary economic activities in the area until the end of the 19th century, when
Henry Flagler's railroad began taking tourists further south in Florida. In 1895, the
Great Freeze destroyed the area's citrus crops, and tourism all but ended. The 1920s had renewed development, with automobile traffic once again bringing in tourists. The
Great Depression of the 1930s marked the end of this period of growth for the city. The first women's club in the state of Florida was established in Green Cove Springs in 1883. The Village Improvement Association led local efforts to beautify the town, and established its first public library. The period immediately before and during World War II again brought new growth to Green Cove Springs. On September 11, 1940, the
U.S. Navy opened
Naval Air Station Lee Field in honor of Ensign Bejamin Lee, who had lost his life in a crash at Killinghome, England, during World War I. In August 1943, the facility was renamed
Naval Air Station Green Cove Springs and consisted of four asphalt runways. One of the Marine Corps aviators training in the
F4U Corsair Operational Training Unit at Lee Field in early 1945 was eventual television personality
Ed McMahon. After the war, NAS Green Cove Springs was downgraded in status to a Naval Auxiliary Air Station (NAAS) as part of the greater
NAS Jacksonville complex. Thirteen piers were constructed along the west bank of the St. Johns River adjacent to NAAS Green Cove Springs to house a U.S. Navy
Atlantic Reserve Fleet, Florida "mothball fleet" of some 500 vessels, primarily
destroyers, destroyer escorts, and fleet auxiliaries. In 1960, the Navy decommissioned NAAS Green Cove Springs and the pier facility. Some of the mothballed vessels were transferred to foreign navies, while others were relocated to other Reserve Fleet locations. In 1984, the city annexed the former naval base into the city to use it for further growth and development as the Clay County Port and Reynolds Industrial Park. The air station is now a private airfield known as Reynolds Airpark (FAA airfield identifier
FL60) with a single asphalt runway currently operational, although reportedly in poor condition. Though the original air traffic control tower is still standing, attached to one of the former Navy aircraft hangars, the airfield remains an uncontrolled facility. Green Cove Springs is the birthplace of
Charles E. Merrill (1885–1956), one of the founders of
Merrill Lynch. The town's spring is described by his son
James Merrill in the poem "Two From Florida", published in
The Inner Room (1988). Green Cove Springs is also the birthplace of
Augusta Savage (née Augusta Christine Fells, February 29, 1892 – March 26, 1962). Savage was an African-American sculptor associated with the
Harlem Renaissance. Locally, the community is known as the home of
Gustafson's Farm, a brand name of milk and dairy products sold throughout Florida. The main Gustafson Dairy Farm is located in Green Cove Springs and is one of the largest privately owned dairy farms in the Southeastern United States. Started in 1908, the main farm occupies nearly adjacent to the city limits. Gustafson's has many bottling plants across the state, stretching from
Tallahassee in the west to
Tampa and
Cocoa in the south. All Gustafson products have the picture of the husband-and-wife founders, Frank and Agnes Gustafson (also known as Mama and Papa Gus), who along with their first cow on their farm (named "Buttercup") are prominently featured on the packaging of the dairy's products. Scenes for the 1971 "B" monster movie
Blood Waters of Dr. Z (or
Zaat) were filmed here. The movie was satirized on the television program
Mystery Science Theater 3000.
Historic places These sites are listed on the
National Register of Historic Places: •
Clay County Courthouse •
Green Cove Springs Historic District •
St. Mary's Church • "The Hellhouse" original rehearsal studio to
Lynyrd Skynyrd ==Government==