Springs Fever: A Field & Recreation Guide to 500 Florida Springs.
3rd Edition by Joe Follman and Richard Buchanan

Manatee Mineral Spring

Manatee County

Summary of Features

  • Scale - 0 magnitude (no longer flows)
  • Scenery - good
  • How Pristine? - in small park near downtown in neighborhood
  • Swimming - no
  • Protection - good
  • Crowds - low recreational use
  • Access - excellent
  • Facilities - good
  • Safety - unknown
  • Cost - free


Directions

Address: 200-, 298 14th Street East, Bradenton, FL 34208

From the intersection of State Road 64 and U.S. Highway 41 in Bradenton, drive south on U.S. 41 for about five blocks.  Turn left (east) and go another two blocks to park/spring site.

Spring Description

The site of the historic spring is covered with a circular concrete plug that is about 7 feet in diameter and nearly one foot thick.  There is no flow or evidence of flow (i.e., a dry run) a the site, which has evidently been dry or plugged for many years.  It appears that the spring originally flowed north and emptied into the Manatee River a few blocks away.

Use/Access

Personal Impressions

JF stumbled across the park while visiting the historic district in 1993.  He remembered the park and was able to find it again in December 2001, when the photograph was taken.

Springiana

An historic marker is next to the spring (see photograph) and has the following inscription:

MANATEE MINERAL SPRING

Here flowed a spring which had been used by Indians and was found by Manatee's first white settler, Josiah Gates, who settled nearby in January 1842.  It served Branch Fort, when the early settlers camped nearby for protection from the Seminole Raid of 1856.  During this encampment, the first child born (March 4, 1856) was Furman Chairs Whitaker, who became Manatee County's first native born doctor, practicing here from 1896, until shortly before his death in 1945.  In the early 1900s, the spring became the center of a small park which included a pacnic pavilion.

Nearby Springs