Relocating in Orange County? Don’t let moving days turn into a meltdown. Don’t move a muscle is your local moving maestro, orchestrating a transition from start to finish.
Don’t move a muscle isn’t your run-of-the-mill moving company. We’re a league of extraordinary movers dedicated to making your relocation experience flawless. We use furniture dollies with shock absorbers that could rival a monster truck, and our packing tape is strong enough to hold a rocket together. Your belongings deserve the royal treatment, which we deliver to Var County.
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Moving can be a real pain. Well, you know. But with Don’t move a muscle, you can skip the stress and embrace the excitement of a new chapter. We’re the Winter Park movers who handle every detail, from packing those awkward floor lamps to disassembling that bed frame that always seems to have one extra screw. Ready to move with the confidence of a champion? Call Don’t move a muscle at 352-901-8611 in OrangeCounty.
The Winter Park area’s first human residents were migrant Muscogee people who had earlier intermingled with the Choctaw and other indigenous people. In a process of ethnogenesis, the Native Americans formed a new culture which they called “Seminole”, a derivative of the Mvskoke’ (a Creek language) word simano-li, an adaptation of the Spanish cimarrón which means “wild” (in their case, “wild men”), or “runaway” [men]. The site was first inhabited by Europeans in 1858, when David Mizell Jr. bought an 8-acre (32,000 m2) homestead between Lakes Virginia, Mizell, and Berry. A settlement, called Lake View by the inhabitants, grew up around Mizell’s plot. It got a post office and a new name-Osceola-in 1870.
The area did not develop rapidly until 1880, when a South Florida Railroad track connecting Orlando and Sanford was laid a few miles west of Osceola. Shortly afterwards, Loring Chase came to Orange County from Chicago to recuperate from a lung disease. In his travels, he discovered the pretty group of lakes just east of the railbed. He enlisted a wealthy New Englander, Oliver E. Chapman, and they assembled a very large tract of land for $13,000 on July 4, 1881. They planned the town of Winter Park on this piece of land. Over the next four years they plotted the town, opened streets, built a town hall and a store, planted orange trees, and required all buildings to meet stylistic and architectural standards. Winter Park was a heavily planned city, something that is still evident in its streets’ grindlike organization. The town was then promoted heavily, especially to snow birds in the north looking for a place to hibernate in the winter. During this founding time, the Winter Park Post Office opened, and the railroad constructed a depot, connected to Osceola by a dirt road.
In 1885, a group of businessmen started the Winter Park Company and incorporated it with the Florida Legislature; Chase and Chapman sold the town to the new company. In a land bubble characteristic of Florida history, land prices soared from less than $2 per acre to over $200, with at least one sale recorded at $300 per acre. This land bubble concept would never go away, with towns and counties directly surrounding the area with exponentially cheaper land prices.
Learn more about Winter Park.Local Resources