The name of Lake Welaka is taken from "Welaka" (meaning "chain of lakes"), the name for the St. Johns River in
Muskogee language of the
Seminole. The first European to visit the lake was
Pedro Menéndez de Avilés, who as the
Spanish governor of
Florida, explored the St. Johns River in the spring of 1596. Later, the Florida territory was sold to
Britain. The royal botanist in America to
King George III,
John Bartram, explored the St. Johns River in 1765. It was John Bartram who gave the lake the name Lake George, in honor of his king. In more recent years, Lake George has been home to an operational
U.S. military bombing and aerial mining range. The range is affiliated with the
U.S. Navy's
Pinecastle Bombing Range located in the
Ocala National Forest just west of Lake George. The bombing ranges date back to
World War II, when the Navy built bomb targets in Lake George and nearby Crescent Lake, and stationed personnel in the area to maintain the targets and perform search and rescue operations for downed pilots. Today, the range is under the operational control of nearby
Naval Air Station Jacksonville. The lake also hosts a wide variety of wildlife ranging from migratory water birds and alligators to a number of normally marine animals. Local springs in Lake George (and throughout the St Johns River) impart enough salt to the system to make the habitat suitable to resident and migratory marine species like
Atlantic stingray, various species of
mullet,
striped bass and
blue crabs. There is a large enough blue crab population to support a local fishery, making it one of the only fresh water blue crab fisheries in the world. ==See also==