Florida Memory is administered by the Florida Department of State, Division of Library and Information Services, Bureau of Archives and Records Management. The digitized records on Florida Memory come from the collections of the State Archives of Florida and the special collections of the State Library of Florida.
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Image Number
Photographer
Date
Collection
N2008- 5, Photographic collection, ca 1962-1974; Box 24a
Subject Term
Recreation areas--Florida--Leon County
Parks--Florida--Leon County
Military parks--Florida--Leon County
Historic sites--Florida--Leon County
Battlefields--Florida--Leon County
Civil war
Natural Bridge, Battle of, Fla, 1865
War memorials--Florida--Leon County
Battlefield monuments--Florida--Leon County
Monuments--Florida--Leon County
Physical Description
General Note
Richard Parks began working at Evon Streetman Photography in Tallahassee ca. 1963. Streetman later sold the business and studio to Parks when she moved to Gainesville about 1965. The studio was renamed Richard Parks Photography.
The historic Natural Bridge battlefield is the site of the second largest Civil War battle in Florida, and where the St. Marks River goes underground and flows for a distance of about one-quarter of a mile before reappearing, therefore forming a natural bridge. In 1865, during the final weeks of the Civil War, a Union flotilla landed at Apalachee Bay, planning to capture Fort Ward (San Marcos de Apalache Historic State Park) and march north to the state capital. With a timely warning, volunteers from the Tallahassee area-Confederate soldiers, old men, and young boys-met the Union forces at Natural Bridge and successfully repelled three major attacks. The Union troops were forced to retreat to the coast and Tallahassee was preserved as the only Confederate capital east of the Mississippi that did not surrender to Union forces. The United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) acquired the older portion of the park to erect the monument and managed the property until it became a state park in 1949. A reenactment of the battle is held at the park every March. The historic Natural Bridge Battlefield site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970 and is cited as one of the top ten endangered Civil War sites in the United States by the Civil War Preservation Trust. In February 2009, the state of Florida purchased nearly 55 acres of land adjacent to the original property to protect a first magnitude spring.
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Chicago Manual of Style
Parks, Richard. Natural Bridge Battlefield Historic State Park monument in Leon County, Florida. 1967. State Archives of Florida, Florida Memory. <https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/46794>, accessed 13 June 2026.
MLA
Parks, Richard. Natural Bridge Battlefield Historic State Park monument in Leon County, Florida. 1967. State Archives of Florida, Florida Memory. Accessed 13 Jun. 2026.<https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/46794>
AP Style Photo Citation
(State Archives of Florida/Parks)
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