In 1879, the new post office south of the steamboat wharfs on Lake Jesup
was named Oviedo for a city in northern Spain to blend with the old La
Florida. Oviedo has grown from a farm town to become the cultural and
commercial center for Black Hammock, Geneva, Chuluota, Snow Hill,
Slavia, Jamestown, Gabriella, Mills Lake, and Taintsville (taint Oviedo,
taint Chuluota). Around Oviedo is more than a title--it is a sense of
place. Lakes, rivers, and conservation lands surround Oviedo, forever
preserving its frontier Florida heritage. Neighboring University of
Central Florida has drawn professors, engineers, and tech-development
professionals to spin-off office parks. The city and business and
community groups, including the volunteers at TOPP (the Oviedo
Preservation Project), maintain the rural heritage and protect old
structures in and around Oviedo. In a state where many cities look
exactly like the next, no matter how many university professors and
high-tech engineers live in Oviedo, downtown's free-range and well-fed
chickens prove the town still has its celery- and sod-farming
traditions.