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Lakeland, Florida

Lakeland is the most populous city in Polk County, Florida, part of the Tampa Bay Area, located along Interstate 4 east of Tampa. According to the 2020 U.S. Census Bureau release, the city had a population of 112,641.[7] Lakeland is a principal city of the Lakeland–Winter Haven Metropolitan Statistical Area.

Lakeland, Florida
Downtown Lakeland
Nickname: 
Swan City[1]
Location in Polk County and the state of Florida
Coordinates: 28°2′28″N 81°57′32″W / 28.04111°N 81.95889°W / 28.04111; -81.95889Coordinates: 28°2′28″N 81°57′32″W / 28.04111°N 81.95889°W / 28.04111; -81.95889
CountryUnited States
StateFlorida
CountyPolk
Settledc. 1875
Incorporated (city)January 1, 1885
Government
 • TypeCommission-Manager
 • MayorBill Mutz
 • City ManagerShawn Sherrouse
Area
 • City75.30 sq mi (195.02 km2)
 • Land66.29 sq mi (171.69 km2)
 • Water9.01 sq mi (23.34 km2)  10.9%
Elevation194 ft (59 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • City112,641
 • Density1,699.27/sq mi (656.09/km2)
 • Urban
277,915 (US: 147th)[4]
 • Urban density1,904.4/sq mi (735.3/km2)
 • Metro
725,046 (US: 80th)[3]
DemonymLakelander
Time zoneUTC−5 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
ZIP Codes
33801–33815
Area code863
FIPS code12-38250[6]
GNIS feature ID0294459[5]
Websitewww.lakelandgov.net

European-American settlers arrived in Lakeland from Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia and South Carolina in the 1870s. The city expanded in the 1880s with the arrival of rail service, with the first freedmen railway workers settling here in 1883.[8] They and European immigrants also came because of land development opportunities with farming, citrus, cattle and phosphate industry developing. Lakeland is home to the 1,267-acre Circle B Bar Reserve.[9]

History

Prehistory

The first Paleo-Indians reached the central Florida area near the end of the last ice age, as they followed big game south.[10][11] As the ice melted and sea levels rose, these Native Americans ended up staying and thrived on the peninsula for thousands of years. By the time the first Spanish conquistadors arrived, an estimated 350,000 Native Americans were living in what is now the state of Florida.[12] Some of these first early tribes were the Tocobago, Timucua, and Calusa.

In 1527, a Spanish map showed a settlement near the Rio de la Paz.[10][11] The arrival of the Spanish turned out to be disastrous to these Native American tribes. Within 150 years, the majority of the pre-Columbian Native American peoples of Florida had been wiped out. Those who had not succumbed to diseases such as smallpox or yellow fever were either killed or enslaved.[10][11][13][14] Little is left of these first Native Americans cultures in Polk County except for scant archaeological records, including a few personal artifacts and shell mounds. Eventually, the remnants of these tribes merged with the Creek Indians who had arrived from the north and became the Seminole Indian tribe.[11][14]

Early history

 
Lakeland's business district, early 1920s
 
The John F. Cox Grammar School opened in 1925, now re-purposed as the clinic for Lakeland Volunteers in Medicine

In the 18th century Native Americans groups, collectively called "Seminoles", moved into the areas left vacant. In 1823 the United States and the various tribes in Florida signed the Treaty of Moultrie Creek, which created a reservation in central Florida that included what is now Polk County.[15] Starting in 1832 the United States government tried to move the Seminoles in Florida west to the Indian Territory. Most of the Seminoles resisted, resulting in the Second Seminole War, 1835–1842. By the end of that war, most of the Seminoles had been sent west, with a few remnants pushed well south of what is now Polk County.[16]

Statehood and the 19th century

Florida became a state in 1845, and Polk County was established in 1861. After the American Civil War, the county seat was established southeast of Lakeland in Bartow. While most of Polk County's early history centered on the two cities of Bartow and Fort Meade, eventually, people entered the areas in northern Polk County and began settling in the areas which became Lakeland.[17]

Lakeland was first settled in the 1870s and began to develop as the rail lines reached the area in 1884. Freedmen settled here in 1883, starting development of what became the African-American neighborhood of Moorehead. Lakeland was incorporated January 1, 1885. The town was founded by Abraham Munn (a resident of Louisville, Kentucky), who purchased 80 acres (320,000 m2) of land in what is now downtown Lakeland in 1882 and platted the land for the town in 1884. Lakeland was named for the many lakes near the town site.[18]

In April 1898, the Spanish–American War began and started a crucial point in Lakeland's development. While the war ended quickly and had little effect on most of the nation, the Florida peninsula was used as a launching point for military forces in the war. The then small town of Lakeland housed over 9,000 troops. The 10th Cavalry Regiment, one of the original Buffalo Soldier regiments, were housed on the banks of Lake Wire.[19] Soon after being stationed there, the black troops faced conflict with the local white population. In one event, a local druggist refused to sell to black soldiers and an argument ensued which eventually escalated to the point where the druggist brandished a pistol. The soldiers shot the druggist before he could fire, which resulted in two of the troops being arrested.[20]

The Florida Boom and the 20th century

The Florida boom resulted in the construction of many significant structures in Lakeland, a number of which are now listed on the National Register of Historic Places. This list includes the Terrace Hotel, New Florida Hotel (Regency Tower, currently Lake Mirror Tower), Polk Theatre, Frances Langford Promenade, Polk Museum of Art (not a product of the 1920s boom), Park Trammell Building (formerly the Lakeland Public Library and today the Lakeland Chamber of Commerce), and others. The city also has several historic districts that have many large buildings built during the 1920s and 1940s. The Cleveland Indians held spring training there from 1923 to 1927 at Henley Field Ball Park. Parks were developed surrounding Lake Mirror, including Barnett Children's Park, Hollis Gardens, and the newest, Allen Kryger Park.[21]

The "boom" period went "bust" quickly, and years passed before the city recovered. Part of the re-emergence was due to the arrival of the Detroit Tigers baseball team in 1934 for spring training. The Tigers still train at Lakeland's Joker Marchant Stadium and own the city's Class A Florida State League team, the Lakeland Flying Tigers. In the mid-1930s, the Works Progress Administration built the Lakeland Municipal Airport.[17]

In 1938, Florida Southern College President Ludd Spivey invited architect Frank Lloyd Wright to design a "great education temple in Florida."[22] Wright worked on the project for over 20 years as Spivey found ways to fund it and find construction workers during World War II.[22] Wright's original plan called for 18 structures; in total he designed 30, but only 12 were completed.[23] Wright's textile block motif is used extensively on the campus. The concrete blocks he used are in need of restoration.[24]

Wright titled the project Child of the Sun, describing his Florida Southern buildings as being "out of the ground, into the light, a child of the sun."[25] It is the largest single-site collection of Frank Lloyd Wright buildings in the world, and attracts 30,000 visitors each year.[23] In 1975, the "Florida Southern Architectural District" was added to the National Register of Historic Places.[23] In 2012, Wright's campus was designated as a National Historic Landmark by the National Park Service.

World War II

At the beginning of World War II, the Lakeland School of Aeronautics—headquartered at the recently built Lakeland Municipal Airport—became part of a nationwide network of civilian flight schools enjoined for the war effort by the United States Army Air Corps.[26]

Between 1940 and 1945, more than 8,000 Army Air Corps and Army Air Forces cadets trained on two-seater Stearman PT-17 and PT-13 biplanes at the school (renamed the Lodwick School of Aeronautics in the midst of this period).[26]

From June 1941 until October 1942, 1,327 British Royal Air Force cadets trained at the Lakeland facility.[26] The Lodwick School of Aeronautics closed in 1945. The airport ceased flight operations in the 1960; the site has since then housed the Detroit Tigers' "Tiger Town" baseball complex.[26]

Geography and climate

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has an area of 67 sq mi (173.5 km2), of which 45.84 sq mi (118.7 km2) is land and 5.61 sq mi (14.5 km2) (10.90%) is covered by water. Lakeland is within the Central Florida Highlands area of the Atlantic coastal plain, with a terrain consisting of flatland interspersed with gently rolling hills.[27]

Lakes

 
Lake Mirror Park in downtown Lakeland, with surrounding City Hall and Lakeland Terrace Hotel

The dominant feature in Lakeland is the city's many lakes. Thirty-eight lakes are named, with a number of other bodies of water unnamed, mostly phosphate mine pits that eventually filled with water.[28][29] The largest of these is Lake Parker, which is 2,550 acres (10.3 km2) in size. Much of the culture of Lakeland revolves around its many lakes, and many people use the lakes as reference points in much the same way people in other towns use streets as reference points, such as "I live near Lake Beulah." In addition to Lake Parker, some of the more prominent lakes in the Lakeland area are Lake Hollingsworth, Lake Morton, Lake Mirror, and Lake Gibson.

Swans are one of the most visible features on the lakes near downtown Lakeland. They have a long history, the first swans appearing around 1923. By 1954, the swans were gone, eradicated by alligators and pets. A Lakeland resident who mourned the passing of the swans wrote to Queen Elizabeth. The royal family allowed the capture of two of the royal swans, and the swans now on the lakes of Lakeland are the descendants of the one surviving royal swan sent by the Queen.[30]

In July 2006, Scott Lake, one of the city's lakes, was almost totally drained by a cluster of sinkholes.[31] Later the lake partially refilled.[32]

Climate

Lakeland, like most other parts of Florida north of Lake Okeechobee, is in the humid subtropical zone (Köppen climate classification: Cfa). Typically, summers are hot and humid with high temperatures seldom dropping below 90 °F and 70 °F for the overnight low. Like most of Central Florida, afternoon thunderstorms are the norm throughout the summer. Winters in Lakeland are drier and warm, with frequent sunny skies. High temperatures range in the mid 70s during the day, with lows in the 50s. Cold snaps drop temperatures below freezing twice a year on average.

Climate data for Lakeland, Florida, 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1948–present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 87
(31)
90
(32)
92
(33)
96
(36)
103
(39)
105
(41)
102
(39)
100
(38)
98
(37)
96
(36)
93
(34)
89
(32)
105
(41)
Average high °F (°C) 73.7
(23.2)
76.7
(24.8)
80.2
(26.8)
85.1
(29.5)
89.5
(31.9)
91.3
(32.9)
92.1
(33.4)
92.2
(33.4)
90.3
(32.4)
85.9
(29.9)
79.8
(26.6)
75.6
(24.2)
84.4
(29.1)
Daily mean °F (°C) 62.2
(16.8)
65.0
(18.3)
68.3
(20.2)
73.2
(22.9)
78.2
(25.7)
81.8
(27.7)
83.2
(28.4)
83.3
(28.5)
81.7
(27.6)
76.4
(24.7)
69.2
(20.7)
64.8
(18.2)
73.9
(23.3)
Average low °F (°C) 50.6
(10.3)
53.3
(11.8)
56.5
(13.6)
61.4
(16.3)
66.9
(19.4)
72.3
(22.4)
74.2
(23.4)
74.4
(23.6)
73.1
(22.8)
66.9
(19.4)
58.6
(14.8)
53.9
(12.2)
63.5
(17.5)
Record low °F (°C) 20
(−7)
24
(−4)
25
(−4)
35
(2)
47
(8)
56
(13)
64
(18)
63
(17)
61
(16)
38
(3)
28
(−2)
20
(−7)
20
(−7)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 2.99
(76)
2.33
(59)
3.06
(78)
2.82
(72)
3.80
(97)
8.69
(221)
8.85
(225)
9.08
(231)
7.62
(194)
3.04
(77)
1.93
(49)
2.61
(66)
56.82
(1,443)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 6.9 6.4 5.4 5.4 7.8 16.5 19.0 18.7 14.9 7.5 5.1 7.1 120.7
Source: NOAA[33][34]

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
1890552
19001,180113.8%
19103,719215.2%
19207,06289.9%
193018,554162.7%
194022,06818.9%
195030,85139.8%
196041,35034.0%
197042,8033.5%
198047,40610.8%
199070,57648.9%
200078,45211.2%
201097,42224.2%
2020112,64115.6%
U.S. Decennial Census[35]
Lakeland Demographics
2010 Census Lakeland Polk County Florida
Total population 97,422 602,095 18,801,310
Population, percent change, 2000 to 2010 +24.2% +24.4% +17.6%
Population density 1,492.6/sq mi 334.9/sq mi 350.6/sq mi
White or Caucasian (including White Hispanic) 70.8% 75.2% 75.0%
(Non-Hispanic White or Caucasian) 63.1% 64.6% 57.9%
Black or African-American 20.9% 14.8% 16.0%
Hispanic or Latino (of any race) 12.6% 17.7% 22.5%
Asian 1.8% 1.6% 2.4%
Native American or Native Alaskan 0.3% 0.4% 0.4%
Pacific Islander or Native Hawaiian 0.1% 0.1% 0.1%
Two or more races (Multiracial) 2.7% 2.4% 2.5%
Some Other Race 2.6% 5.5% 3.6%

As of 2010, 48,218 households were in the city, with 15.5% being vacant. As of 2000, 23.5% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 43.5% were married couples living together, 13.7% had a female householder with no husband present, and 39% were individuals and nontraditional families. About 32.9% of all households were made up of individuals, and 14.9% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.23 and the average family size was 2.82.

As of the 2010 census, the city was 20.9% Black or African American, 70.8% White, 0.3% Native American, 1.8% Asian, 0.1% Native Hawaiian, and 2.7% were two or more races. Of the population 12.6% were of Hispanic or Latino ancestry.

In 2000, the city the population was spread out, with 21.4% under the age of 18, 10.3% from 18 to 24, 24.7% from 25 to 44, 20.6% from 45 to 64, and 23.0% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 40 years. For every 100 females, there were 86.8 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 82.1 males.

In 2000, the median income for a household in the city was $16,119, and for a family was $17,468. Males had a median income of $14,137 versus $9,771 for females. The per capita income for the city was $15,760. About 47% of families and 35% of the population were below the poverty line, including 97% of those under age 18 and 9% of those age 65 or over. In 2008–2012, the per capita income was $23,817 and the median household income was $40,284. Persons below the poverty line in 2008–2012 were 17.5% according to the US Census.[36]

Languages

As of 2000, those who spoke only English at home accounted for 91% of all residents, while 9% spoke other languages at home. The most significant were Spanish speakers who made up 6.4% of the population, while German came up as the third-most spoken language, which made up 0.8%, and French was fourth, with 0.5% of the population.[37]

Religion

 
Annie Pfeiffer Chapel

In 1913, the Wolfson family arrived from Lithuania and became the first Jewish settlers to the area.[38] After some struggles, the Jewish community in Lakeland flourished and the first synagogue, Temple Emanuel opened in 1932.[39]

The Rohr Jewish Learning Institute presents classes and seminars in Lakewood in partnership with Chabad of Lakeland.[40]

Lakeland is home to the Swaminarayan Hindu Temple, which was established in 2005.[41]

In 1994, the first and only mosque in the county was established. It was called Masjid Aisha, but is now called the Islamic Center of Lakeland.[citation needed]

Christianity makes up the largest religious group in Lakeland. As of 2013, an estimated 300 churches existed with an address in the city.[42]

Economy

 
Publix headquarters

Lakeland is the largest city on Interstate 4 between Orlando and Tampa. Large industries in the Lakeland area are citrus, cattle, and phosphate mining. In the past few decades, tourism, medicine, insurance, transportation, and music have grown in importance.

Citrus growing dates back to the early settlers who planted trees in the area in the 1850s. After a series of freezes in counties north of Polk County, the area became the focal point for citrus growing in Florida. Although citrus is no longer the largest industry in the area, it still plays a large part in the economy of Lakeland and Polk County.

Phosphate mining is still important to the economy of Lakeland, although most of the mining now takes place farther south. The Bone Valley produced 25% of the U.S. phosphate supply.

Lakeland's largest employer is Publix Supermarkets.[43] Publix is one of the largest regional grocery chains in the United States with over 1,200 stores across the American South. Publix employs over 6,500 people in the Lakeland area including headquarter and warehouse employees.

Lakeland is a transportation hub. FedEx Freight and FedEx Services and the Saddle Creek Corporation employ over 600 people in the area.[43] Other large employers in the area include Amazon,[44] GEICO, Rooms To Go, and Lakeland Regional Health.[45]

Culture

The Lakeland History Room is a special collections archive established in 1987 housed within the Lakeland Public Library's main branch. The Lakeland History Room maintains the City's collection of historical materials as well as other locally relevant collections composed of documents, photographs, maps, building plans, audio/visual media, scrapbooks, specialty items like citrus crate labels, artwork, yearbooks, posters, and postcards.[46] The LHR maintains a large digital collection with over 7,000 images of the city of Lakeland, its landmarks, significant historical moments, cultural institutions, and prominent citizens.[46] The LHR provides one-on-one assistance with historic research, a history lecture series with prominent local historians, a DIY Digitizing Lab for personal material preservation, and genealogical programs and resources.[46]

In 2019, an initiative led by Lakeland City Commissioner Phillip Walker, was first presented to the City Commission to create the City's first History and Culture Center. The project was unanimously approved by the Commission and funds were allocated for the project's construction; although, the exhibit's content design would be funded by local donations and grant funding.[47] An advisory committee made up of educators, city officials, local business owners, and civic and community leaders, led by former Mayor Gow Fields, was established to organize and advise the City in the design, content, and construction of the exhibit.[47] The Lakeland Public Library was eventually chosen as the location of the future exhibit space due to its central location within the city, its status as a community hub, and because it was the current home of the city's local archive, the Lakeland History Room, which would be expanded into the Lakeland History and Culture Center. Construction on the project is currently underway and it is unknown when the project will be completed.[citation needed]

Historic districts

 
Munn Park

Buildings and locations

 
Century Plaza in downtown Lakeland.
 
Frances Langford Promenade

Sports

Club Sport Founded Current league Stadium
Lakeland Flying Tigers Baseball 1963[48] Florida State League Publix Field at Joker Marchant Stadium
Florida Complex League Tigers Baseball 1995[citation needed] Florida Complex League Publix Field at Joker Marchant Stadium
Lakeland Magic Basketball 2017[49] NBA G League RP Funding Center
Florida Southern Mocs Multi-sport 1883 NCAA DII George W. Jenkins Field House
Henley Field
Moccasin Field
Southeastern Fire Multi-sport 2014[50] NAIA Victory Field
The Furnace
Ted A. Broer Stadium
Caledonia SC Soccer 2022 USL League Two
Lakeland Tropics Soccer 2017[51] UPSL Bryant Stadium
Lakeland United FC Soccer 2022 UPSL
Florida Tropics SC Indoor soccer 2016[52] Major Arena Soccer League RP Funding Center
Lakeland Renegades Rugby league 2019 USA Rugby League All Saints' Academy
Lakeland NightShade eSports 2019[53] Florida eSports League

Stadiums

Joker Marchant Stadium, north of downtown, hosts spring training for the Detroit Tigers, as well as their Lakeland Flying Tigers class-A Florida State League and GCL Tigers rookie-league Gulf Coast League minor league baseball teams.

RP Funding Center is also home to two indoor sports teams. The Lakeland Magic is a basketball team playing in the NBA G League and is an affiliate of the Orlando Magic. The Florida Tropics SC is an indoor soccer team playing in the Major Arena Soccer League. The Tropics organization also operates an outdoor team, the Lakeland Tropics, which competes in the Premier Development League. The Florida Tarpons were an indoor football team playing in the American Arena League for one season after relocating from Estero, Florida.

History of sports teams

In the 1980s, the Lakeland Center briefly played host to the indoor version of the Tampa Bay Rowdies soccer team. The Lakeland Center has also hosted a few hockey teams, the Lakeland Ice Warriors, the Lakeland Prowlers, and the Lakeland Loggerheads. The United States Basketball League once had a team here as well called the Lakeland Blue Ducks. Sun 'n Fun was home to Lakeland's only roller derby league, the Lakeland Derby Dames; however, the team was dissolved in November 2015.[54]

The Lakeland Center also hosts the Florida High School Athletic Association's state basketball finals.

Government and politics

 
Former Lakeland city hall, built 1913

Lakeland is governed by a six-member city council. Four members are elected from single-member districts; the other two are elected at-large, requiring them to gain a majority of the votes. The mayor is elected.

Mayor

The City of Lakeland was incorporated on January 1, 1885. The mayor is one of seven members of the City Commission, acting as the board chair and performing mostly ceremonial and procedural duties beyond the powers of the other six. Prior to 1988, the City Commission selected Lakeland's mayor from among its members. Mayors can be on the board for up to 12 years in a lifetime, or 16 years in combination with holding a regular commission position. Lakeland's first mayor was J.W. Trammell.

The first female mayor was Lois Q. Searl, who served in 1965. The 1970 municipal election placed the first African-American on the City Commission, Dr. John S. Jackson. In 1972, he became the first black mayor for the city. In 1980, Carrie R. Oldham became Lakeland's first African-American female mayor.

Since 1988 the mayor has been elected by the city's voters.

List of mayors of Lakeland, Florida
  • John W. Trammell, 1885
  • John D. Torrence, 1885
  • Eppes C. Tucker Sr., 1886, 1887, 1888
  • Napoleon B. Bowyer, 1889, 1890
  • Herbert J. Drane, 1888–1892[55]
  • J. T. Park, 1894
  • Clarence A. Boswell, 1894–1896
  • James p. Thompson, 1897, 1899
  • Samuel L.A. Clonts, 1898, 1903, 1904, 1912[56]
  • C. M. Marsh, 1898
  • Park Trammell, 1900–1902[55]
  • John F. Cox, 1905–1907, 1911, 1916, 1917
  • John S. Edwards, 1909
  • Jackson, William K., 1910
  • Oscar M. Eaton, 1913–1915
  • Edwin C. Flanagan, 1918, 1919
  • Frank H. Thompson, 1920
  • Hubert C. Petteway, 1921
  • J.T. Hodges, 1922,1923[57]
  • Daniel C. Boswell, 1924
  • John W. Buchanan Jr., 1925
  • J. Bunyan Smith, 1926
  • Jesse F. Council, 1927, 1928
  • William S. Rodgers, 1927
  • William F. Reid, 1928, 1931
  • Charles I. Dwiggins, 1929
  • H. Dean Grady, 1930, 1931
  • Benjamin M. Pulliam, 1932
  • Elijah A. Godwin, 1933, 1935
  • Edward L. Mack, 1934
  • George W. Mershon, 1936
  • H. Clay Haynes, 1937[55]
  • Lutie M. Koons, 1938
  • Thomas D. Conter, 1939
  • Ira C. Hopper, 1940
  • George J. Tolson, 1941, 1944, 1947
  • Elmer E. Kelly Jr., 1942
  • Horace W. Gibson, 1943
  • William Cade, 1945, 1948
  • Edwin C. Flanagan Jr., 1946
  • Clinton V. McClurg, 1948
  • Ernest B. Sutton, 1949
  • Guerry L. Dobbins, 1950
  • Clayton Logan, 1951[55]
  • James J. Musso, 1952, 1958 [55]
  • Norman T. Kent, 1953[55]
  • Wilbur Y. Wooten, 1954[55]
  • S. Scott Kelly, 1955[55]
  • Mac H. Cunningham, 1956
  • Earl W. Bowen, 1957
  • William M. Hollis, 1958
  • R. Tom Joyner Jr., c. 1959[55]
  • William G. Cooper Jr., 1960
  • Reuben H. Gibson, 1961
  • Morris J. Pritchard, 1962
  • William H. Lofton, 1963
  • R. Harold Grizzard, 1964
  • James R. West, 1965
  • Lois Q. Searl, 1965
  • John H. Woodall Jr., 1966
  • W. Jack Day, 1967
  • George W. Trask, 1968, 1969, 1974
  • Marvin H. Henderson Jr., 1970
  • Joe P. Ruthven, 1971
  • Charles E. Whitten, 1972
  • John S. Jackson, 1972, 1973
  • W. Carl Dicks, 1975
  • Peggy C. Brown, 1976, 1984
  • Charles A. Coleman, 1977
  • John Tolson, 1977
  • Curtis I. Walker, 1978
  • George R. Burt, 1979
  • Carrie R. Oldham, 1980, first African-American female mayor
  • R. Larry Turnipseed, 1981
  • J. Larry Durrence, 1982, 1986
  • Frank J. O'Reilly, 1983, 1987, 1989–1993
  • Thomas R. Shaw, 1985
  • Willie J. Williams, 1988
  • Buddy Fletcher, 1993–2009
  • Gow Fields, 2010–2013, first African-American mayor elected in the city
  • R. Howard Wiggs, 2014–2018[58]
  • Bill Mutz, 2018–present[59]

Law enforcement

On September 28, 2006, Polk County Sheriff's Deputy Vernon "Matt" Williams and his K-9 partner Diogi were shot and killed after a routine traffic stop in the Wabash area of Lakeland. More than 500 police officers from a variety of law enforcement agencies joined in a search for Angilo Freeland, suspected of murdering Williams and stealing his gun. Freeland was found hiding in a rural area the next morning. Nine officers from five different law enforcement agencies surrounded Freeland and shot him when he raised Williams' stolen gun at them. A total of 110 shots were fired, and Freeland was hit 68 times, killing him instantly.[60][61] Multiple investigations concluded the officers' use of force was justified.[62] Deputy Williams and Diogi were laid to rest on October 3, 2006, after a funeral that included a one-hour-and-45-minute procession to Auburndale.[63]

In 2021, the Lakeland Police Department hired numerous former NYPD officers. Two of the new hires failed to disclose that they had been disciplined by the NYPD, and one new hire used to work in the NYPD's notorious anti-crime units which were disbanded after high-profile scandals.[64]

Education

The 28 elementary schools, seven middle schools, six traditional high schools, and three magnet-choice high schools in the Lakeland area are run by the Polk County School Board.

Traditional public high schools

Magnet high schools

Traditional public middle schools

  • Kathleen Middle School
  • Lake Gibson Middle School
  • Crystal Lake Middle school
  • Sleepy Hill Middle School
  • Lakeland Highlands Middle School
  • Southwest Middle School

Magnet middle schools

  • Lawton Chiles Middle School
  • Rochelle School of the Arts (elementary and middle)

Charter schools

  • McKeel Academy of Technology
  • Lakeland Montessori Schoolhouse
  • Lakeland Montessori Middle School
  • Lakeland Collegiate High school
  • Magnolia Montessori Academy

Private schools

  • Calvary Baptist Church Academy
  • Geneva Classical Academy
  • Heritage Christian Academy
  • Lakeland Christian Preparatory School
  • Lakeland Christian School
  • Parkway Christian Academy
  • Resurrection Catholic School
  • Santa Fe Catholic High School
  • Sonrise Christian School
  • St Anthony
  • St Joseph
  • St Lukes
  • St Paul Lutheran School
  • Victory Christian Academy
  • Excel Christian Academy

Colleges and universities

 
The IST building of Florida Polytechnic University

A number of opportunities exist for higher education around the Lakeland area. Southeastern University is the largest university in the area, with undergraduate enrollment around 6200.[65] Southeastern is affiliated with the Assemblies of God. Florida Southern College, established in 1883 and with a current undergraduate enrollment of just over 2600,[66] is on Lake Hollingsworth. Florida Southern is the home of the world's largest single-site collection of Frank Lloyd Wright architecture. In July 2008, the University of South Florida's Lakeland campus was granted partial autonomy by Governor Charlie Crist and became Florida Polytechnic University. Florida Polytechnic (FLPoly) is just inside the Lakeland's northeast border at the intersection of I-4 and Polk Parkway. They also have some administrative offices on the campus of Polk State College on Winter Lake Road. FLPoly is focused on STEM degree programs, such as engineering and computer science.[67] Both Everest University and Keiser University, two multisite, accredited universities, have locations in Lakeland. Traviss Career Center is a vocational school.[68] Webster University offers on-site, regionally accredited graduate degree programs in business and counseling at their Lakeland Metropolitan Campus[69]

Media

Polk County is within the Tampa Bay television market. Charter Spectrum is the cable television franchise serving Lakeland, which offers most television stations from the Tampa Bay market, as well as WFTV, the ABC affiliate from Orlando. WMOR-TV, an independent television station, is licensed to Lakeland, with its studios in Tampa and its transmitter in Riverview.

Lakeland and Polk County are within its own radio market. Local radio stations include:

WLLD 94.1 FM is licensed to Lakeland, but has wider focus on the Tampa Bay area, with studios in St. Petersburg. WKES 91.1 FM is also licensed to Lakeland as part of the statewide Moody Radio Florida network, with studios in Seminole, near St. Petersburg. Most major stations from Tampa Bay and a few from Orlando are also available.

Print media include The Ledger, a local newspaper owned by Gannett. Patterson Jacobs Media Group publishes a magazine, The Lakelander.

Infrastructure

Transportation

Because Lakeland is the largest city on Interstate 4 between Tampa and Orlando, the city is an important transportation hub. The county nickname, Imperial Polk County, was coined because a large bond issue in 1914 enabled wide roads between the cities of Polk County.[70]

The important freeways and highways in Lakeland today are:

  •   I-4 (Interstate 4) is the main interstate in central Florida linking Tampa, Lakeland, Orlando, and Daytona Beach.
  •   SR 570 (or Polk Parkway), is a tolled beltway around Lakeland, with both ends terminating at Interstate 4. Although its shape, location, and tolls makes it impractical as a "bypass" road, it is useful as a way of getting from part of town to another and providing access to I-4 from most parts of the city.
  •   US 92, following Memorial Boulevard for most of the city, was the route leading to both Tampa and Orlando before I-4 was built; US 92 is still a main road leading to Plant City going west, and Auburndale, Winter Haven, and Haines City going east.
  •   US 98, going south, follows Bartow Road and leads to Bartow, the county seat. Heading north out of town, it provides a route to Dade City.
  •   SR 33, following mostly rural land, provides access to Lake County and the Florida Turnpike.
  •   SR 37, following Florida Avenue, the main north–south route in Lakeland, is also the main road leading south to Mulberry.
  •   SR 540, Winter-Lake Road, is in southern Lakeland, leading to Winter Haven and Legoland Florida.

Bicycle routes

In recent years, the Lakeland area has developed a number of paved, multi-use bicycle routes including the Lake-To-Lakes Trail, which runs from Lake Parker through downtown, past several lakes, ending at Lake John. Other routes include University Trail, which connects Polk State College to Florida Polytechnic University, and the Fort Fraser Trail, which runs along US Highway 98 from Polk State College to Highway 60 in Bartow.[71]

Public transportation

 
Lakeland Amtrak Station

Utilities

Water and wastewater in the Lakeland area is managed by Lakeland Water Utilities, municipal water supply is treated at local water plants, T.B. Williams and C. Wayne Combee. The water is mainly supplied by wells that draw from the Floridan aquifer.[74] Power is generated by a nonprofit public power utility, Lakeland Electric.[75]

Lakeland Electric is a municipal utility and government department of the city of Lakeland, Florida.[76][77] Lakeland was the third city in the state of Florida to have electric lighting powered in 1891 by The Lakeland Light and Power Company after Jacksonville and Tampa. Over a decade later in 1904, citizens purchased the private light power plant for $7,500 establishing the locally owned, municipal utility known today as Lakeland Electric.[78][79][80]

Power plants

Lakeland Electric powers the city of Lakeland by two power plants, C.D. McIntosh Power Plant, coal-natural gas combined cycle plant slated to phase out in 2024, and Larsen Memorial. [81] The last coal unit at C.D. McIntosh Power Plant is slated to phase out in 2024 a plan presented by the Lakeland Electric staff in 2019.[82][83]

Notable people

Entertainment

Sports

Other

Sister cities

Lakeland Sister Cities International (LSCI), a chapter of Sister Cities International, was formed in 1990 with Lakeland's first sister city Richmond Hill, Canada.[125]

In popular culture

 
Southgate Shopping Center

In 1990, Lakeland made its Hollywood debut when the Southgate Shopping Center was featured in the movie Edward Scissorhands. It was also used in the filming of the Judd Nelson movie Endure.[126] Classrooms from Florida Southern College were used in the Adam Sandler comedy, The Waterboy.[127] The Lakeland civic center also was the filming location for music video for Little Red Corvette by Prince (musician)

See also

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Bibliography

  • "Lakeland". Florida Gazetteer and Business Directory 1907–1908. R. L. Polk & Co. 1907.
  • "Lakeland". Florida State Gazetteer and Business Directory. R. L. Polk & Co. 1918.
  • Lakeland and Polk County Directory. R.L. Polk & Co. 1923.  
  • Federal Writers’ Project (1939). "Lakeland". Florida: a Guide to the Southernmost State. American Guide Series. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 515–518. ISBN 9781623760090 – via Google Books.
  • This Was Yesterday: a History of Lakeland, Florida. Junior Welfare League of Greater Lakeland. 1973.
  • Hampton Dunn (1976). Yesterday's Lakeland.
  • Lynn M. Homan; Thomas Reilly (2001). Lakeland. Images of America. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia. ISBN 9780738513980.
  • Paul T. Hellmann (2006). "Florida". Historical Gazetteer of the United States. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 1-135-94859-3.

External links

  • Official website
  • Lakeland Chamber of Commerce
  • "Brief History of Lakeland, Florida" (PDF), Lakelandgov.net
  • "(Lakeland)". Florida Memory. Florida Department of State, Division of Library and Information Services.

lakeland, florida, lakeland, most, populous, city, polk, county, florida, part, tampa, area, located, along, interstate, east, tampa, according, 2020, census, bureau, release, city, population, lakeland, principal, city, lakeland, winter, haven, metropolitan, . Lakeland is the most populous city in Polk County Florida part of the Tampa Bay Area located along Interstate 4 east of Tampa According to the 2020 U S Census Bureau release the city had a population of 112 641 7 Lakeland is a principal city of the Lakeland Winter Haven Metropolitan Statistical Area Lakeland FloridaCityDowntown LakelandFlagNickname Swan City 1 Location in Polk County and the state of FloridaCoordinates 28 2 28 N 81 57 32 W 28 04111 N 81 95889 W 28 04111 81 95889 Coordinates 28 2 28 N 81 57 32 W 28 04111 N 81 95889 W 28 04111 81 95889CountryUnited StatesStateFloridaCountyPolkSettledc 1875Incorporated city January 1 1885Government TypeCommission Manager MayorBill Mutz City ManagerShawn SherrouseArea 2 City75 30 sq mi 195 02 km2 Land66 29 sq mi 171 69 km2 Water9 01 sq mi 23 34 km2 10 9 Elevation 5 194 ft 59 m Population 2020 City112 641 Density1 699 27 sq mi 656 09 km2 Urban277 915 US 147th 4 Urban density1 904 4 sq mi 735 3 km2 Metro725 046 US 80th 3 DemonymLakelanderTime zoneUTC 5 EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT ZIP Codes33801 33815Area code863FIPS code12 38250 6 GNIS feature ID0294459 5 Websitewww lakelandgov netEuropean American settlers arrived in Lakeland from Missouri Kentucky Tennessee Georgia and South Carolina in the 1870s The city expanded in the 1880s with the arrival of rail service with the first freedmen railway workers settling here in 1883 8 They and European immigrants also came because of land development opportunities with farming citrus cattle and phosphate industry developing Lakeland is home to the 1 267 acre Circle B Bar Reserve 9 Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistory 1 2 Early history 1 3 Statehood and the 19th century 1 4 The Florida Boom and the 20th century 1 5 World War II 2 Geography and climate 2 1 Lakes 2 2 Climate 3 Demographics 3 1 Languages 3 2 Religion 4 Economy 5 Culture 5 1 Historic districts 5 2 Buildings and locations 6 Sports 6 1 Stadiums 6 2 History of sports teams 7 Government and politics 7 1 Mayor 7 2 Law enforcement 8 Education 8 1 Traditional public high schools 8 2 Magnet high schools 8 3 Traditional public middle schools 8 4 Magnet middle schools 8 5 Charter schools 8 6 Private schools 8 7 Colleges and universities 8 8 Media 9 Infrastructure 9 1 Transportation 9 1 1 Bicycle routes 9 1 2 Public transportation 9 2 Utilities 9 2 1 Power plants 10 Notable people 10 1 Entertainment 10 2 Sports 10 3 Other 11 Sister cities 12 In popular culture 13 See also 14 References 15 Bibliography 16 External linksHistory EditPrehistory Edit The first Paleo Indians reached the central Florida area near the end of the last ice age as they followed big game south 10 11 As the ice melted and sea levels rose these Native Americans ended up staying and thrived on the peninsula for thousands of years By the time the first Spanish conquistadors arrived an estimated 350 000 Native Americans were living in what is now the state of Florida 12 Some of these first early tribes were the Tocobago Timucua and Calusa In 1527 a Spanish map showed a settlement near the Rio de la Paz 10 11 The arrival of the Spanish turned out to be disastrous to these Native American tribes Within 150 years the majority of the pre Columbian Native American peoples of Florida had been wiped out Those who had not succumbed to diseases such as smallpox or yellow fever were either killed or enslaved 10 11 13 14 Little is left of these first Native Americans cultures in Polk County except for scant archaeological records including a few personal artifacts and shell mounds Eventually the remnants of these tribes merged with the Creek Indians who had arrived from the north and became the Seminole Indian tribe 11 14 Early history Edit Lakeland s business district early 1920s The John F Cox Grammar School opened in 1925 now re purposed as the clinic for Lakeland Volunteers in Medicine In the 18th century Native Americans groups collectively called Seminoles moved into the areas left vacant In 1823 the United States and the various tribes in Florida signed the Treaty of Moultrie Creek which created a reservation in central Florida that included what is now Polk County 15 Starting in 1832 the United States government tried to move the Seminoles in Florida west to the Indian Territory Most of the Seminoles resisted resulting in the Second Seminole War 1835 1842 By the end of that war most of the Seminoles had been sent west with a few remnants pushed well south of what is now Polk County 16 Statehood and the 19th century Edit Florida became a state in 1845 and Polk County was established in 1861 After the American Civil War the county seat was established southeast of Lakeland in Bartow While most of Polk County s early history centered on the two cities of Bartow and Fort Meade eventually people entered the areas in northern Polk County and began settling in the areas which became Lakeland 17 Lakeland was first settled in the 1870s and began to develop as the rail lines reached the area in 1884 Freedmen settled here in 1883 starting development of what became the African American neighborhood of Moorehead Lakeland was incorporated January 1 1885 The town was founded by Abraham Munn a resident of Louisville Kentucky who purchased 80 acres 320 000 m2 of land in what is now downtown Lakeland in 1882 and platted the land for the town in 1884 Lakeland was named for the many lakes near the town site 18 In April 1898 the Spanish American War began and started a crucial point in Lakeland s development While the war ended quickly and had little effect on most of the nation the Florida peninsula was used as a launching point for military forces in the war The then small town of Lakeland housed over 9 000 troops The 10th Cavalry Regiment one of the original Buffalo Soldier regiments were housed on the banks of Lake Wire 19 Soon after being stationed there the black troops faced conflict with the local white population In one event a local druggist refused to sell to black soldiers and an argument ensued which eventually escalated to the point where the druggist brandished a pistol The soldiers shot the druggist before he could fire which resulted in two of the troops being arrested 20 The Florida Boom and the 20th century Edit The Florida boom resulted in the construction of many significant structures in Lakeland a number of which are now listed on the National Register of Historic Places This list includes the Terrace Hotel New Florida Hotel Regency Tower currently Lake Mirror Tower Polk Theatre Frances Langford Promenade Polk Museum of Art not a product of the 1920s boom Park Trammell Building formerly the Lakeland Public Library and today the Lakeland Chamber of Commerce and others The city also has several historic districts that have many large buildings built during the 1920s and 1940s The Cleveland Indians held spring training there from 1923 to 1927 at Henley Field Ball Park Parks were developed surrounding Lake Mirror including Barnett Children s Park Hollis Gardens and the newest Allen Kryger Park 21 The boom period went bust quickly and years passed before the city recovered Part of the re emergence was due to the arrival of the Detroit Tigers baseball team in 1934 for spring training The Tigers still train at Lakeland s Joker Marchant Stadium and own the city s Class A Florida State League team the Lakeland Flying Tigers In the mid 1930s the Works Progress Administration built the Lakeland Municipal Airport 17 In 1938 Florida Southern College President Ludd Spivey invited architect Frank Lloyd Wright to design a great education temple in Florida 22 Wright worked on the project for over 20 years as Spivey found ways to fund it and find construction workers during World War II 22 Wright s original plan called for 18 structures in total he designed 30 but only 12 were completed 23 Wright s textile block motif is used extensively on the campus The concrete blocks he used are in need of restoration 24 Wright titled the project Child of the Sun describing his Florida Southern buildings as being out of the ground into the light a child of the sun 25 It is the largest single site collection of Frank Lloyd Wright buildings in the world and attracts 30 000 visitors each year 23 In 1975 the Florida Southern Architectural District was added to the National Register of Historic Places 23 In 2012 Wright s campus was designated as a National Historic Landmark by the National Park Service World War II Edit At the beginning of World War II the Lakeland School of Aeronautics headquartered at the recently built Lakeland Municipal Airport became part of a nationwide network of civilian flight schools enjoined for the war effort by the United States Army Air Corps 26 Between 1940 and 1945 more than 8 000 Army Air Corps and Army Air Forces cadets trained on two seater Stearman PT 17 and PT 13 biplanes at the school renamed the Lodwick School of Aeronautics in the midst of this period 26 From June 1941 until October 1942 1 327 British Royal Air Force cadets trained at the Lakeland facility 26 The Lodwick School of Aeronautics closed in 1945 The airport ceased flight operations in the 1960 the site has since then housed the Detroit Tigers Tiger Town baseball complex 26 Geography and climate EditAccording to the United States Census Bureau the city has an area of 67 sq mi 173 5 km2 of which 45 84 sq mi 118 7 km2 is land and 5 61 sq mi 14 5 km2 10 90 is covered by water Lakeland is within the Central Florida Highlands area of the Atlantic coastal plain with a terrain consisting of flatland interspersed with gently rolling hills 27 Lakes Edit Lake Mirror Park in downtown Lakeland with surrounding City Hall and Lakeland Terrace Hotel The dominant feature in Lakeland is the city s many lakes Thirty eight lakes are named with a number of other bodies of water unnamed mostly phosphate mine pits that eventually filled with water 28 29 The largest of these is Lake Parker which is 2 550 acres 10 3 km2 in size Much of the culture of Lakeland revolves around its many lakes and many people use the lakes as reference points in much the same way people in other towns use streets as reference points such as I live near Lake Beulah In addition to Lake Parker some of the more prominent lakes in the Lakeland area are Lake Hollingsworth Lake Morton Lake Mirror and Lake Gibson Swans are one of the most visible features on the lakes near downtown Lakeland They have a long history the first swans appearing around 1923 By 1954 the swans were gone eradicated by alligators and pets A Lakeland resident who mourned the passing of the swans wrote to Queen Elizabeth The royal family allowed the capture of two of the royal swans and the swans now on the lakes of Lakeland are the descendants of the one surviving royal swan sent by the Queen 30 In July 2006 Scott Lake one of the city s lakes was almost totally drained by a cluster of sinkholes 31 Later the lake partially refilled 32 Climate Edit Lakeland like most other parts of Florida north of Lake Okeechobee is in the humid subtropical zone Koppen climate classification Cfa Typically summers are hot and humid with high temperatures seldom dropping below 90 F and 70 F for the overnight low Like most of Central Florida afternoon thunderstorms are the norm throughout the summer Winters in Lakeland are drier and warm with frequent sunny skies High temperatures range in the mid 70s during the day with lows in the 50s Cold snaps drop temperatures below freezing twice a year on average Climate data for Lakeland Florida 1991 2020 normals extremes 1948 presentMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 87 31 90 32 92 33 96 36 103 39 105 41 102 39 100 38 98 37 96 36 93 34 89 32 105 41 Average high F C 73 7 23 2 76 7 24 8 80 2 26 8 85 1 29 5 89 5 31 9 91 3 32 9 92 1 33 4 92 2 33 4 90 3 32 4 85 9 29 9 79 8 26 6 75 6 24 2 84 4 29 1 Daily mean F C 62 2 16 8 65 0 18 3 68 3 20 2 73 2 22 9 78 2 25 7 81 8 27 7 83 2 28 4 83 3 28 5 81 7 27 6 76 4 24 7 69 2 20 7 64 8 18 2 73 9 23 3 Average low F C 50 6 10 3 53 3 11 8 56 5 13 6 61 4 16 3 66 9 19 4 72 3 22 4 74 2 23 4 74 4 23 6 73 1 22 8 66 9 19 4 58 6 14 8 53 9 12 2 63 5 17 5 Record low F C 20 7 24 4 25 4 35 2 47 8 56 13 64 18 63 17 61 16 38 3 28 2 20 7 20 7 Average precipitation inches mm 2 99 76 2 33 59 3 06 78 2 82 72 3 80 97 8 69 221 8 85 225 9 08 231 7 62 194 3 04 77 1 93 49 2 61 66 56 82 1 443 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 6 9 6 4 5 4 5 4 7 8 16 5 19 0 18 7 14 9 7 5 5 1 7 1 120 7Source NOAA 33 34 Demographics EditHistorical populationCensus Pop 1890552 19001 180113 8 19103 719215 2 19207 06289 9 193018 554162 7 194022 06818 9 195030 85139 8 196041 35034 0 197042 8033 5 198047 40610 8 199070 57648 9 200078 45211 2 201097 42224 2 2020112 64115 6 U S Decennial Census 35 Lakeland Demographics2010 Census Lakeland Polk County FloridaTotal population 97 422 602 095 18 801 310Population percent change 2000 to 2010 24 2 24 4 17 6 Population density 1 492 6 sq mi 334 9 sq mi 350 6 sq miWhite or Caucasian including White Hispanic 70 8 75 2 75 0 Non Hispanic White or Caucasian 63 1 64 6 57 9 Black or African American 20 9 14 8 16 0 Hispanic or Latino of any race 12 6 17 7 22 5 Asian 1 8 1 6 2 4 Native American or Native Alaskan 0 3 0 4 0 4 Pacific Islander or Native Hawaiian 0 1 0 1 0 1 Two or more races Multiracial 2 7 2 4 2 5 Some Other Race 2 6 5 5 3 6 As of 2010 48 218 households were in the city with 15 5 being vacant As of 2000 23 5 had children under the age of 18 living with them 43 5 were married couples living together 13 7 had a female householder with no husband present and 39 were individuals and nontraditional families About 32 9 of all households were made up of individuals and 14 9 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 23 and the average family size was 2 82 As of the 2010 census the city was 20 9 Black or African American 70 8 White 0 3 Native American 1 8 Asian 0 1 Native Hawaiian and 2 7 were two or more races Of the population 12 6 were of Hispanic or Latino ancestry In 2000 the city the population was spread out with 21 4 under the age of 18 10 3 from 18 to 24 24 7 from 25 to 44 20 6 from 45 to 64 and 23 0 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 40 years For every 100 females there were 86 8 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 82 1 males In 2000 the median income for a household in the city was 16 119 and for a family was 17 468 Males had a median income of 14 137 versus 9 771 for females The per capita income for the city was 15 760 About 47 of families and 35 of the population were below the poverty line including 97 of those under age 18 and 9 of those age 65 or over In 2008 2012 the per capita income was 23 817 and the median household income was 40 284 Persons below the poverty line in 2008 2012 were 17 5 according to the US Census 36 Languages Edit As of 2000 those who spoke only English at home accounted for 91 of all residents while 9 spoke other languages at home The most significant were Spanish speakers who made up 6 4 of the population while German came up as the third most spoken language which made up 0 8 and French was fourth with 0 5 of the population 37 Religion Edit Annie Pfeiffer ChapelIn 1913 the Wolfson family arrived from Lithuania and became the first Jewish settlers to the area 38 After some struggles the Jewish community in Lakeland flourished and the first synagogue Temple Emanuel opened in 1932 39 The Rohr Jewish Learning Institute presents classes and seminars in Lakewood in partnership with Chabad of Lakeland 40 Lakeland is home to the Swaminarayan Hindu Temple which was established in 2005 41 In 1994 the first and only mosque in the county was established It was called Masjid Aisha but is now called the Islamic Center of Lakeland citation needed Christianity makes up the largest religious group in Lakeland As of 2013 an estimated 300 churches existed with an address in the city 42 Economy Edit Publix headquarters Lakeland is the largest city on Interstate 4 between Orlando and Tampa Large industries in the Lakeland area are citrus cattle and phosphate mining In the past few decades tourism medicine insurance transportation and music have grown in importance Citrus growing dates back to the early settlers who planted trees in the area in the 1850s After a series of freezes in counties north of Polk County the area became the focal point for citrus growing in Florida Although citrus is no longer the largest industry in the area it still plays a large part in the economy of Lakeland and Polk County Phosphate mining is still important to the economy of Lakeland although most of the mining now takes place farther south The Bone Valley produced 25 of the U S phosphate supply Lakeland s largest employer is Publix Supermarkets 43 Publix is one of the largest regional grocery chains in the United States with over 1 200 stores across the American South Publix employs over 6 500 people in the Lakeland area including headquarter and warehouse employees Lakeland is a transportation hub FedEx Freight and FedEx Services and the Saddle Creek Corporation employ over 600 people in the area 43 Other large employers in the area include Amazon 44 GEICO Rooms To Go and Lakeland Regional Health 45 Culture EditThe Lakeland History Room is a special collections archive established in 1987 housed within the Lakeland Public Library s main branch The Lakeland History Room maintains the City s collection of historical materials as well as other locally relevant collections composed of documents photographs maps building plans audio visual media scrapbooks specialty items like citrus crate labels artwork yearbooks posters and postcards 46 The LHR maintains a large digital collection with over 7 000 images of the city of Lakeland its landmarks significant historical moments cultural institutions and prominent citizens 46 The LHR provides one on one assistance with historic research a history lecture series with prominent local historians a DIY Digitizing Lab for personal material preservation and genealogical programs and resources 46 In 2019 an initiative led by Lakeland City Commissioner Phillip Walker was first presented to the City Commission to create the City s first History and Culture Center The project was unanimously approved by the Commission and funds were allocated for the project s construction although the exhibit s content design would be funded by local donations and grant funding 47 An advisory committee made up of educators city officials local business owners and civic and community leaders led by former Mayor Gow Fields was established to organize and advise the City in the design content and construction of the exhibit 47 The Lakeland Public Library was eventually chosen as the location of the future exhibit space due to its central location within the city its status as a community hub and because it was the current home of the city s local archive the Lakeland History Room which would be expanded into the Lakeland History and Culture Center Construction on the project is currently underway and it is unknown when the project will be completed citation needed Historic districts Edit Munn Park Beacon Hill Alta Vista Residential District Biltmore Cumberland Historic District Dixieland Historic District East Lake Morton Residential District Lake Hunter Terrace Historic District Munn Park Historic District South Lake Morton Historic DistrictBuildings and locations Edit Century Plaza in downtown Lakeland Frances Langford Promenade Central Avenue School Cleveland Court School John F Cox Grammar School Lakeland Center Lakeland Square Mall Lakeside Village Old Lakeland High School James Henry Mills Medal of Honor Parkway Oates Building Polk State College Polk Museum of Art Polk Theatre Southeastern University Florida USA International Speedway Florida Polytechnic University Winston School Without Walls Central Church a local regional megachurch Silvermoon Drive in Bonnet SpringsSports EditClub Sport Founded Current league StadiumLakeland Flying Tigers Baseball 1963 48 Florida State League Publix Field at Joker Marchant StadiumFlorida Complex League Tigers Baseball 1995 citation needed Florida Complex League Publix Field at Joker Marchant StadiumLakeland Magic Basketball 2017 49 NBA G League RP Funding CenterFlorida Southern Mocs Multi sport 1883 NCAA DII George W Jenkins Field HouseHenley FieldMoccasin FieldSoutheastern Fire Multi sport 2014 50 NAIA Victory FieldThe FurnaceTed A Broer StadiumCaledonia SC Soccer 2022 USL League TwoLakeland Tropics Soccer 2017 51 UPSL Bryant StadiumLakeland United FC Soccer 2022 UPSLFlorida Tropics SC Indoor soccer 2016 52 Major Arena Soccer League RP Funding CenterLakeland Renegades Rugby league 2019 USA Rugby League All Saints AcademyLakeland NightShade eSports 2019 53 Florida eSports LeagueStadiums Edit Main article Publix Field at Joker Marchant Stadium Joker Marchant Stadium north of downtown hosts spring training for the Detroit Tigers as well as their Lakeland Flying Tigers class A Florida State League and GCL Tigers rookie league Gulf Coast League minor league baseball teams Main article RP Funding Center RP Funding Center is also home to two indoor sports teams The Lakeland Magic is a basketball team playing in the NBA G League and is an affiliate of the Orlando Magic The Florida Tropics SC is an indoor soccer team playing in the Major Arena Soccer League The Tropics organization also operates an outdoor team the Lakeland Tropics which competes in the Premier Development League The Florida Tarpons were an indoor football team playing in the American Arena League for one season after relocating from Estero Florida History of sports teams Edit In the 1980s the Lakeland Center briefly played host to the indoor version of the Tampa Bay Rowdies soccer team The Lakeland Center has also hosted a few hockey teams the Lakeland Ice Warriors the Lakeland Prowlers and the Lakeland Loggerheads The United States Basketball League once had a team here as well called the Lakeland Blue Ducks Sun n Fun was home to Lakeland s only roller derby league the Lakeland Derby Dames however the team was dissolved in November 2015 54 The Lakeland Center also hosts the Florida High School Athletic Association s state basketball finals Government and politics Edit Former Lakeland city hall built 1913 Lakeland is governed by a six member city council Four members are elected from single member districts the other two are elected at large requiring them to gain a majority of the votes The mayor is elected Mayor Edit The City of Lakeland was incorporated on January 1 1885 The mayor is one of seven members of the City Commission acting as the board chair and performing mostly ceremonial and procedural duties beyond the powers of the other six Prior to 1988 the City Commission selected Lakeland s mayor from among its members Mayors can be on the board for up to 12 years in a lifetime or 16 years in combination with holding a regular commission position Lakeland s first mayor was J W Trammell The first female mayor was Lois Q Searl who served in 1965 The 1970 municipal election placed the first African American on the City Commission Dr John S Jackson In 1972 he became the first black mayor for the city In 1980 Carrie R Oldham became Lakeland s first African American female mayor Since 1988 the mayor has been elected by the city s voters List of mayors of Lakeland FloridaJohn W Trammell 1885 John D Torrence 1885 Eppes C Tucker Sr 1886 1887 1888 Napoleon B Bowyer 1889 1890 Herbert J Drane 1888 1892 55 J T Park 1894 Clarence A Boswell 1894 1896 James p Thompson 1897 1899 Samuel L A Clonts 1898 1903 1904 1912 56 C M Marsh 1898 Park Trammell 1900 1902 55 John F Cox 1905 1907 1911 1916 1917 John S Edwards 1909 Jackson William K 1910 Oscar M Eaton 1913 1915 Edwin C Flanagan 1918 1919 Frank H Thompson 1920 Hubert C Petteway 1921 J T Hodges 1922 1923 57 Daniel C Boswell 1924 John W Buchanan Jr 1925 J Bunyan Smith 1926 Jesse F Council 1927 1928 William S Rodgers 1927 William F Reid 1928 1931 Charles I Dwiggins 1929 H Dean Grady 1930 1931 Benjamin M Pulliam 1932 Elijah A Godwin 1933 1935 Edward L Mack 1934 George W Mershon 1936 H Clay Haynes 1937 55 Lutie M Koons 1938 Thomas D Conter 1939 Ira C Hopper 1940 George J Tolson 1941 1944 1947 Elmer E Kelly Jr 1942 Horace W Gibson 1943 William Cade 1945 1948 Edwin C Flanagan Jr 1946 Clinton V McClurg 1948 Ernest B Sutton 1949 Guerry L Dobbins 1950 Clayton Logan 1951 55 James J Musso 1952 1958 55 Norman T Kent 1953 55 Wilbur Y Wooten 1954 55 S Scott Kelly 1955 55 Mac H Cunningham 1956 Earl W Bowen 1957 William M Hollis 1958 R Tom Joyner Jr c 1959 55 William G Cooper Jr 1960 Reuben H Gibson 1961 Morris J Pritchard 1962 William H Lofton 1963 R Harold Grizzard 1964 James R West 1965 Lois Q Searl 1965 John H Woodall Jr 1966 W Jack Day 1967 George W Trask 1968 1969 1974 Marvin H Henderson Jr 1970 Joe P Ruthven 1971 Charles E Whitten 1972 John S Jackson 1972 1973 W Carl Dicks 1975 Peggy C Brown 1976 1984 Charles A Coleman 1977 John Tolson 1977 Curtis I Walker 1978 George R Burt 1979 Carrie R Oldham 1980 first African American female mayor R Larry Turnipseed 1981 J Larry Durrence 1982 1986 Frank J O Reilly 1983 1987 1989 1993 Thomas R Shaw 1985 Willie J Williams 1988 Buddy Fletcher 1993 2009 Gow Fields 2010 2013 first African American mayor elected in the city R Howard Wiggs 2014 2018 58 Bill Mutz 2018 present 59 Law enforcement Edit On September 28 2006 Polk County Sheriff s Deputy Vernon Matt Williams and his K 9 partner Diogi were shot and killed after a routine traffic stop in the Wabash area of Lakeland More than 500 police officers from a variety of law enforcement agencies joined in a search for Angilo Freeland suspected of murdering Williams and stealing his gun Freeland was found hiding in a rural area the next morning Nine officers from five different law enforcement agencies surrounded Freeland and shot him when he raised Williams stolen gun at them A total of 110 shots were fired and Freeland was hit 68 times killing him instantly 60 61 Multiple investigations concluded the officers use of force was justified 62 Deputy Williams and Diogi were laid to rest on October 3 2006 after a funeral that included a one hour and 45 minute procession to Auburndale 63 In 2021 the Lakeland Police Department hired numerous former NYPD officers Two of the new hires failed to disclose that they had been disciplined by the NYPD and one new hire used to work in the NYPD s notorious anti crime units which were disbanded after high profile scandals 64 Education EditThe 28 elementary schools seven middle schools six traditional high schools and three magnet choice high schools in the Lakeland area are run by the Polk County School Board Traditional public high schools Edit Mulberry Senior High School George W Jenkins High School Kathleen High School Lake Gibson High School Lakeland Senior High School Tenoroc High School Magnet high schools Edit Central Florida Aerospace Academy Lois Cowles Harrison Center for the Visual and Performing Arts Polk State College Lakeland Collegiate High School Traditional public middle schools Edit Kathleen Middle School Lake Gibson Middle School Crystal Lake Middle school Sleepy Hill Middle School Lakeland Highlands Middle School Southwest Middle School Magnet middle schools Edit Lawton Chiles Middle School Rochelle School of the Arts elementary and middle Charter schools Edit McKeel Academy of Technology Lakeland Montessori Schoolhouse Lakeland Montessori Middle School Lakeland Collegiate High school Magnolia Montessori Academy Private schools Edit Calvary Baptist Church Academy Geneva Classical Academy Heritage Christian Academy Lakeland Christian Preparatory School Lakeland Christian School Parkway Christian Academy Resurrection Catholic School Santa Fe Catholic High School Sonrise Christian School St Anthony St Joseph St Lukes St Paul Lutheran School Victory Christian Academy Excel Christian Academy Colleges and universities Edit Florida Polytechnic University Florida Southern College Florida Technical College Keiser University Webster University Polk State College Southeastern University Whitefield Theological Seminary The IST building of Florida Polytechnic University A number of opportunities exist for higher education around the Lakeland area Southeastern University is the largest university in the area with undergraduate enrollment around 6200 65 Southeastern is affiliated with the Assemblies of God Florida Southern College established in 1883 and with a current undergraduate enrollment of just over 2600 66 is on Lake Hollingsworth Florida Southern is the home of the world s largest single site collection of Frank Lloyd Wright architecture In July 2008 the University of South Florida s Lakeland campus was granted partial autonomy by Governor Charlie Crist and became Florida Polytechnic University Florida Polytechnic FLPoly is just inside the Lakeland s northeast border at the intersection of I 4 and Polk Parkway They also have some administrative offices on the campus of Polk State College on Winter Lake Road FLPoly is focused on STEM degree programs such as engineering and computer science 67 Both Everest University and Keiser University two multisite accredited universities have locations in Lakeland Traviss Career Center is a vocational school 68 Webster University offers on site regionally accredited graduate degree programs in business and counseling at their Lakeland Metropolitan Campus 69 Media Edit See also List of newspapers in Florida List of radio stations in Florida and List of television stations in Florida Polk County is within the Tampa Bay television market Charter Spectrum is the cable television franchise serving Lakeland which offers most television stations from the Tampa Bay market as well as WFTV the ABC affiliate from Orlando WMOR TV an independent television station is licensed to Lakeland with its studios in Tampa and its transmitter in Riverview Lakeland and Polk County are within its own radio market Local radio stations include WLKF 1430 AM WONN 1230 AM WWAB 1330 AM WPCV 97 5 FM WWRZ 98 3 FM WLLD 94 1 FM is licensed to Lakeland but has wider focus on the Tampa Bay area with studios in St Petersburg WKES 91 1 FM is also licensed to Lakeland as part of the statewide Moody Radio Florida network with studios in Seminole near St Petersburg Most major stations from Tampa Bay and a few from Orlando are also available Print media include The Ledger a local newspaper owned by Gannett Patterson Jacobs Media Group publishes a magazine The Lakelander Infrastructure EditTransportation Edit Because Lakeland is the largest city on Interstate 4 between Tampa and Orlando the city is an important transportation hub The county nickname Imperial Polk County was coined because a large bond issue in 1914 enabled wide roads between the cities of Polk County 70 The important freeways and highways in Lakeland today are I 4 Interstate 4 is the main interstate in central Florida linking Tampa Lakeland Orlando and Daytona Beach SR 570 or Polk Parkway is a tolled beltway around Lakeland with both ends terminating at Interstate 4 Although its shape location and tolls makes it impractical as a bypass road it is useful as a way of getting from part of town to another and providing access to I 4 from most parts of the city US 92 following Memorial Boulevard for most of the city was the route leading to both Tampa and Orlando before I 4 was built US 92 is still a main road leading to Plant City going west and Auburndale Winter Haven and Haines City going east US 98 going south follows Bartow Road and leads to Bartow the county seat Heading north out of town it provides a route to Dade City SR 33 following mostly rural land provides access to Lake County and the Florida Turnpike SR 37 following Florida Avenue the main north south route in Lakeland is also the main road leading south to Mulberry SR 540 Winter Lake Road is in southern Lakeland leading to Winter Haven and Legoland Florida Bicycle routes Edit In recent years the Lakeland area has developed a number of paved multi use bicycle routes including the Lake To Lakes Trail which runs from Lake Parker through downtown past several lakes ending at Lake John Other routes include University Trail which connects Polk State College to Florida Polytechnic University and the Fort Fraser Trail which runs along US Highway 98 from Polk State College to Highway 60 in Bartow 71 Public transportation Edit Lakeland Amtrak Station Lakeland Amtrak Station Lakeland Linder International Airport In 2017 Linder received its first international flight and was renamed Lakeland Linder International Airport in 2018 72 Lakeland Greyhound Terminal Citrus Connection local bus service 73 Utilities Edit Water and wastewater in the Lakeland area is managed by Lakeland Water Utilities municipal water supply is treated at local water plants T B Williams and C Wayne Combee The water is mainly supplied by wells that draw from the Floridan aquifer 74 Power is generated by a nonprofit public power utility Lakeland Electric 75 Lakeland Electric is a municipal utility and government department of the city of Lakeland Florida 76 77 Lakeland was the third city in the state of Florida to have electric lighting powered in 1891 by The Lakeland Light and Power Company after Jacksonville and Tampa Over a decade later in 1904 citizens purchased the private light power plant for 7 500 establishing the locally owned municipal utility known today as Lakeland Electric 78 79 80 Power plants Edit Lakeland Electric powers the city of Lakeland by two power plants C D McIntosh Power Plant coal natural gas combined cycle plant slated to phase out in 2024 and Larsen Memorial 81 The last coal unit at C D McIntosh Power Plant is slated to phase out in 2024 a plan presented by the Lakeland Electric staff in 2019 82 83 Notable people EditEntertainment Edit Nat Adderley jazz cornetist and composer 84 Lindsey Alley Mouseketeer and actress Bobby Braddock record producer in Country Music Hall of Fame Howard J Buss composer 85 Charleene Closshey film Broadway actress musician and producer Copeland pop alternative rock band Jonny Diaz Christian musician Samantha Dorman Playboy Playmate 86 Rhea Durham Victoria s Secret model 86 Faith Evans singer 86 Stephen Baron Johnson painter Frances Langford singer actress and radio star 1930s and 1940s 86 Neva Jane Langley Miss America 1953 Mike Marshall bluegrass musician and mandolinist Kara Monaco Playboy Playmate 86 Robert Phillips guitarist Lauren Miller Rogen actress Forrest Sawyer NBC reporter and anchor 86 SoulJa rapper Steve1989MREInfo YouTube personality J D Sumner singer and songwriter Dan White 1908 1980 American actor in film and television Monte Yoho drummer for OutlawsSports Edit George Almones NBA Player 87 Dwayne Bacon NBA Player 88 Danny Baggish pro darts player Andy Bean PGA Tour golfer 89 Ahmad Black NFL player Tampa Bay Buccaneers 90 Keon Broxton Milwaukee Brewers Center Fielder Desmond Clark NFL player Chicago Bears 91 Lance Davis MLB player Cincinnati Reds 92 Matt Diaz former MLB player 93 Paul Edinger NFL player Minnesota Vikings and Chicago Bears 94 Justin Forsett running back UC Berkeley citation needed 95 Carson Fulmer former Vanderbilt baseball player drafted 8th overall by Chicago White Sox Kenneth Gant NFL safety Ronnie Ghent football player 96 Matt Grothe quarterback South Florida Bulls 97 Nick Hamilton pro wrestling referee Killian Hayes basketball player 87 Alice Haylett AAGPBL All Star pitcher 98 Drew Hutchison MLB pitcher Lee Janzen PGA Tour golfer U S Open winner 99 Ray Lewis NFL player Baltimore Ravens Super Bowl champion and MVP 2 time NFL Defensive Player of the Year 100 Freddie Mitchell NFL player Philadelphia Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs 101 Joe Nemechek NASCAR Sprint Cup driver 102 Joe Niekro MLB knuckleball pitcher 103 Lance Niekro MLB player San Francisco Giants 104 Steve Pearce MLB player Boston Red Sox 105 Maurkice Pouncey NFL player Pittsburgh Steelers 106 Mike Pouncey former NFL player 107 Boog Powell former MLB player 108 Chris Rainey NFL player Pittsburgh Steelers 109 Andrew Reynolds professional skateboarder 110 Chris Sale MLB player Boston Red Sox 111 Brenda Sell Taekwondo Grandmaster 112 Rod Smart NFL amp XFL player 113 Donnell Smith NFL player Green Bay Packers and New England Patriots 114 Ron Smith NFL player Los Angeles Rams Bill Spivey basketball player 87 Jameson Taillon MLB pitcher New York Yankees Adarius Taylor NFL linebacker Jim Thomas NBA player 87 Justin Verlander MLB pitcher Houston Astros 115 Chris Waters former MLB player 116 Brooks Wilson MLB pitcher Atlanta BravesOther Edit Charles T Canady Chief Justice Florida Supreme Court 117 Lawton Chiles Senator and Governor of Florida 118 Carol Jenkins Barnett philanthropist and businesswoman the daughter of George W Jenkins George W Jenkins founder of Publix Super Markets 119 R Albert Mohler Jr president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary 120 Marvin Pipkin scientist engineer that had many inventions and innovations for the light bulb 121 Gene Ready Florida businessman and state legislator 122 Charles Z Smith Associate Justice Washington State Supreme Court 123 Park Trammell Mayor of Lakeland Florida Attorney General Governor of Florida and U S Senator 124 Sister cities EditSee also List of sister cities in the United StatesLakeland Sister Cities International LSCI a chapter of Sister Cities International was formed in 1990 with Lakeland s first sister city Richmond Hill Canada 125 Bălți Moldova since 1997 Chongming County Shanghai China since 2007 Imabari Ehime Japan since 1995 Portmore Jamaica since 2009 Richmond Hill Ontario Canada since 1990 In popular culture Edit Southgate Shopping Center In 1990 Lakeland made its Hollywood debut when the Southgate Shopping Center was featured in the movie Edward Scissorhands It was also used in the filming of the Judd Nelson movie Endure 126 Classrooms from Florida Southern College were used in the Adam Sandler comedy The Waterboy 127 The Lakeland civic center also was the filming location for music video for Little Red Corvette by Prince musician See also Edit Florida portalList of people from Lakeland Florida Loyce Harpe ParkReferences Edit Crosby Kristin August 30 2016 Swan City Lakelander Retrieved October 4 2021 2020 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved October 31 2021 Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas Population Totals and Components of Change 2020 2021 United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 2 2023 United States Census Bureau December 29 2022 2020 Census Qualifying Urban Areas and Final Criteria Clarifications Federal Register a b U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Lakeland Florida U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 31 2008 Population and Housing Unit Estimates Retrieved May 21 2020 Kimberly C Moore Confederate vets former slaves form Lakeland s history The Ledger 09 May 2018 accessed 27 June 2018 Circle B Bar Reserve Default Retrieved October 29 2021 a b c Ancient Native HOTOA Archived from the original on October 17 2010 Retrieved September 9 2010 a b c d Polk County History Polk Counjty Historical Association Archived from the original on July 27 2011 Retrieved September 11 2010 Milanich Jerald T 1998 1995 Florida Indians and the Invasion from Europe Paperback ed Gainesville Florida University Press of Florida pp 1 2 ISBN 0 8130 1636 3 The Ancient Ones HOTOA Archived from the original on October 17 2010 Retrieved September 9 2010 a b Weibel B Trail of Florida s Ancient Heritage active com Archived from the original on July 13 2010 Retrieved September 9 2010 Mahon John K 1985 History of the Second Seminole War 1835 1842 Revised ed Gainesville Florida University of Florida Press pp 2 8 18 37 ISBN 0 8130 1097 7 Mahon John K 1985 History of the Second Seminole War 1835 1842 Revised ed Gainesville Florida University of Florida Press pp 317 318 ISBN 0 8130 1097 7 a b Brown Canter Jr 2001 In the midst of all that makes life worth living Polk County Florida to 1940 Tallahassee Fla Sentry Press ISBN 9781889574127 Sawyer Martha F July 8 1987 Polk towns named from various sources Lakeland Ledger pp 5C Retrieved June 6 2015 Spanish American War PDF Polk County Historical Quarterly Polk County Historical Association June 2003 p 6 Archived from the original PDF on April 2 2012 Retrieved September 26 2010 Knetsch Joe 2011 Florida in the Spanish American War Charleston SC The History Press pp 131 132 ISBN 9781609490881 Lake Mirror Complex City of Lakeland Retrieved October 29 2021 a b Frank Lloyd Wright s Fla campus The Boston Globe www bostonglobe com Retrieved April 1 2017 a b c MacDonald Randall M Galbraith Nora E Rogers James G January 1 2007 The Buildings of Frank Lloyd Wright at Florida Southern College Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9780738552798 Sussingham Robin New Frank Lloyd Wright House Constructed at Florida Southern Retrieved April 1 2017 Storrer William Allin Wright Frank Lloyd April 15 2002 The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright A Complete Catalog University of Chicago Press p 252 ISBN 9780226776224 wright out of the ground into the light child of the sun a b c d LEDGER GARY WHITE THE Flight Cadets Attended Lakeland School of Aeronautics The Ledger Retrieved April 1 2017 Florida s Geological History University of Florida Retrieved October 14 2010 Measurement of Recovery in Lakes Following Phosphate Mining PDF Florida Institute of Phosphate Research Archived from the original PDF on February 22 2014 Retrieved February 4 2014 Frequently Asked Questions Lakeland Florida Retrieved February 4 2014 Story Map Journal lakelandflorida maps arcgis com Retrieved October 29 2021 Diane Lacey Allen June 23 2006 The Lake is Dry The Ledger Retrieved November 25 2007 Florida Lake Swallowed by Sinkhole Reappearing Associated Press July 25 2006 Retrieved November 25 2007 NOWData NOAA Online Weather Data National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved May 23 2021 Summary of Monthly Normals 1991 2020 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved May 23 2021 Census of Population and Housing Census gov Retrieved June 4 2015 Lakeland city QuickFacts from the US Census Bureau census gov Archived from the original on July 12 2012 Retrieved December 10 2014 Modern Language Association Data Center Results of Lakeland Florida First Jewish Settlers PDF Polk County Historical Association October 2002 p 1 Archived from the original PDF on July 27 2011 Retrieved September 26 2010 Temple Emanuel History PDF Billy October 2002 Archived from the original PDF on July 27 2011 Retrieved September 26 2010 Steve Steiner August 2015 Two part seminar to examine torture negotiating The Polk County Democrat Religion in Polk Lakeland Retrieved September 26 2010 Churches in Lakeland FL Retrieved December 2 2013 a b Lakeland Demographics Guide 2010 PDF City of Lakeland Archived from the original PDF on January 5 2011 Retrieved September 18 2010 Brinkman Paul August 21 2014 Amazon welcomes employees in Lakeland drones in India Orlando Sentinel Retrieved November 20 2016 LAKELAND FL AREA TOP 30 MAJOR EMPLOYERS PDF Lakeland Development Council Retrieved May 6 2019 a b c Lakeland History Room City of Lakeland Retrieved November 29 2021 a b Lakeland History amp Culture Center City of Lakeland Retrieved November 29 2021 Club Information Baseball Reference com Retrieved August 4 2017 Orlando Magic begin process of bringing D League team to Florida Orlando Sentinel Retrieved August 4 2017 This is what a program s first home game ever should look like FootballScoop com Retrieved August 4 2017 Tropics will play at Bryant Stadium Dr Panagiotis Iakovidis is majority owner LakelandTropics com February 7 2017 Retrieved January 11 2018 Florida Tropics SC Join Major Arena Soccer League FLTropics com August 29 2017 Retrieved August 29 2017 Club Information Twitter com Retrieved January 12 2020 Roller derby is back in Lakeland TheLedger com Retrieved August 4 2017 a b c d e f g h i Lawrence Kestenbaum ed Mayors of Lakeland Florida Political Graveyard Retrieved April 21 2017 Clonts Chosen as Mayor PDF Lakeland Evening Telegram November 8 1911 via Library of Congress City Government Lakeland and Polk County Directory R L Polk amp Co 1923 via Internet Archive Howard Wiggs defeats Gow Field in race for Lakeland mayor WFTS E W Scripps Co November 5 2013 Mayor Bill Mutz City of Lakeland Retrieved July 11 2018 Waddell Lynn October 13 2006 68 Bullets Newsweek Autopsy Officers fired 110 rounds at man suspected in cop s death Sunbeam Television Corp September 30 2006 Archived from the original on November 13 2013 Walter Shoshana June 5 2008 Killer s Civil Rights Not Violated Panel Says TheLedger com Stegall Sarah October 4 2006 Thousands Turn Out to Say Thank You TheLedger com Elder Elise November 22 2021 Former NYPD officers in Florida heralded by DeSantis include surprises WUFT News Retrieved November 24 2021 Southeastern University Profile Rankings and Data US News Best Colleges Retrieved May 16 2019 Florida Southern College Profile Rankings and Data US News Best Colleges Retrieved May 16 2019 About Florida Polytechnic University Florida Polytechnic University Retrieved January 30 2017 Traviss Career Center Lakeland Florida Traviss edu Retrieved November 1 2012 Lakeland webster edu Retrieved December 10 2014 Why Imperial Polk Polk County Website Archived from the original on November 29 2010 Retrieved September 10 2010 Trails and Facilities Retrieved April 5 2016 Moore Kimberly C July 12 2018 Airport director on a mission to bring airline service to Lakeland Linder International Airport Lakeland Ledger Retrieved July 20 2018 Citrus Connection ridecitrus com Archived from the original on December 15 2014 Retrieved December 10 2014 Water Utilities Retrieved December 30 2019 More About Lakeland Electric Retrieved July 6 2021 FNP 61 PDF University of Florida Libraries February 22 2002 Public Power in Florida American Public Power Association Retrieved February 13 2020 Brief History of Lakeland lakelandgov net Retrieved February 11 2020 2017 Ten Year Site Plan City of Lakeland Historical Background PDF My Florida Public Service Commission Retrieved February 11 2020 Power Pact The Ledger Retrieved February 13 2020 Inventory of Power Plants in the United States Google Books 1992 Retrieved February 13 2020 Lakeland Electric Moves to Retire Last Coal Unit at CD McIntosh Coal burning Power Plant Sierra Club May 8 2019 Coal power plant in Lakeland owned by OUC and Lakeland Electric to be retired www orlandosentinel com Retrieved February 13 2020 NPR s Jazz Profiles NPR Retrieved September 19 2010 Polk Life Magazine pages 52 53 and 60 Ledger Media Group Retrieved February 25 2015 a b c d e f Most Popular People Born in Lakeland Florida USA IMDb Retrieved September 19 2010 a b c d Edwards II James L Inside Killian Hayes training to become the Pistons point guard of the future Retrieved September 21 2021 Dwayne Bacon NBA Retrieved July 29 2019 Andy Bean PGA Tour Retrieved April 14 2013 43 Ahmad Black DB CBSSports com Retrieved April 14 2013 Desmond Darice Clark databaseFootball com Archived from the original on September 19 2010 Retrieved April 14 2013 Lance Davis Stats Baseball Almanac Retrieved April 14 2013 Matt Diaz Stats Baseball Almanac Retrieved April 14 2013 Paul Edinger databaseFootball com Archived from the original on September 22 2012 Retrieved April 14 2013 High Five Agency http highfiveagency com speakers justin forsett 3 Retrieved November 13 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Ronnie Ghent databaseFootball com Archived from the original on May 30 2012 Retrieved April 14 2013 Matt Grothe Stats ESPN com Retrieved April 14 2013 Alice Haylett ALL AMERICAN GIRLS PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE Retrieved October 20 2018 Lee Janzen The Ledger Florida Retrieved October 20 2018 Ray Lewis databaseFootball com Archived from the original on April 5 2013 Retrieved April 14 2013 Freddie Mitchell databaseFootball com Archived from the original on April 20 2013 Retrieved April 14 2013 Joe Nemechek Nemco Motorsports Retrieved January 28 2020 Katz Jeff 2015 Split Season 1981 Fernandomania the Bronx Zoo and the Strike that Saved Baseball p 133 ISBN 9781250045218 On the lawn of their Lakeland Florida home Joe Niekro had time for a father son catch with his boy Lance Lance Niekro Stats Baseball Almanac Retrieved April 14 2013 Steve Pearce Stats Baseball Almanac Retrieved April 14 2013 Maurkice Pouncey databaseFootball com Archived from the original on April 20 2013 Retrieved April 14 2013 MIKE POUNCEY MIAMI DOLPHINS Lakeland Football Retrieved April 14 2013 Boog Powell Stats Baseball Almanac Retrieved April 14 2013 Chris Rainey Stats databaseFootball com Retrieved April 14 2013 Andrew Reynolds Retrieved September 21 2021 Chris Sale Stats baseball almanac com Retrieved November 26 2012 Lakeland Ledger Google News Archive Search news google com Retrieved March 15 2018 Rod Smart databaseFootball com Archived from the original on February 4 2016 Retrieved November 26 2012 Donnell Smith databaseFootball com Archived from the original on January 23 2013 Retrieved April 14 2013 Detroit Tigers trade Lakeland resident Justin Verlander to Houston Astros The Ledger Retrieved October 25 2017 Chris Waters Stats The Ledger Retrieved October 25 2017 Charles T Canady Chief Justice of the Florida Supreme Court The Florida Bar Journal Retrieved April 14 2013 Biography of Lawton Chiles lawtonchiles org Retrieved September 19 2010 George Jenkins 88 Founder Of 9 Billion Grocery Chain The New York Times April 10 1996 Retrieved April 14 2013 The Reformer Christianity Today Retrieved April 14 2013 Kane Joseph Nathan 1964 Famous First Facts H W Wilson The first electric lamp bulb frosted on the inside with sufficient strength for commercial handling was invented by Marvin Pipkin of the Incandescent Lamp Department of the General Electric Company at Nela Park Ohio On June 29 1925 he applied for a patent Former Legislator Gene Ready Dies at 74 lkldnow lkldnow com December 15 2015 Retrieved March 15 2018 Charles Z Smith depts washington edu Retrieved March 15 2018 Biographical Directory US Congress US Congress Retrieved September 19 2010 Sister Cities City of Lakeland Retrieved May 3 2018 White Gary March 3 2009 Lakeland Filmmakers Snag Judd Nelson TheLedger com Erickson Stephanie October 13 2005 Have any movies been filmed in Polk County Orlando Sentinel Retrieved April 25 2014 Bibliography Edit Lakeland Florida Gazetteer and Business Directory 1907 1908 R L Polk amp Co 1907 Lakeland Florida State Gazetteer and Business Directory R L Polk amp Co 1918 Lakeland and Polk County Directory R L Polk amp Co 1923 Federal Writers Project 1939 Lakeland Florida a Guide to the Southernmost State American Guide Series New York Oxford University Press pp 515 518 ISBN 9781623760090 via Google Books This Was Yesterday a History of Lakeland Florida Junior Welfare League of Greater Lakeland 1973 Hampton Dunn 1976 Yesterday s Lakeland Lynn M Homan Thomas Reilly 2001 Lakeland Images of America Charleston South Carolina Arcadia ISBN 9780738513980 Paul T Hellmann 2006 Florida Historical Gazetteer of the United States Taylor amp Francis ISBN 1 135 94859 3 External links EditLakeland Florida at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Travel information from Wikivoyage Official website Lakeland Chamber of Commerce Brief History of Lakeland Florida PDF Lakelandgov net Lakeland Florida Memory Florida Department of State Division of Library and Information Services Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lakeland Florida amp 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