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Information
History of Police Vehicles
History of Police Motorcycles
The Early Years
1901-1933
1934-1969
The Seventies
The Eighties
The Nineties
History of the Ocala Police Department The Early Years
 "Three days journey is a place called Acuera...farther on is a town call Ocale. It is so large and they do do extol it that I dare not repeat all that is said. They say there are many trades among the people and an abundance of gold and silver, and many pearls...We may go hence and pass the winter at Ocale where if what be said be true, we shall have nothing to desire."

This letter, written by the Spanish explorer, Hernando de Soto on July 9, 1539, was the first known mention of an area know as Ocale or Ocali. Traveling with over 600 followers, de Soto had landed near Tampa Bay and headed north to explore the land known as Florida. He and his army remained several weeks in the Timucua Indian village of Ocali before continuing the northward journey.

Various spellings for Ocali continued to appear in the earliest maps of Florida from the 16th and 17th centuries. The area was spelled Ocali, Ocale, Ocaly, Cale and Elo-cale. The exact translation of the name is not known.

The first permanent settlers in the area of Marion County came around 1814 when several settled in areas near the Ocklawaha River somewhere near Lake Bryant. In 1827 the first soldiers were sent in by the U.S. Army and erected a fort called Fort King after General William King. It was located near the intersection of what is now Fort King Street and Southeast 36 Avenue. General Zachary Taylor made Fort King his headquarters during the Second Seminole War.

On March 25, 1884, the Legislative Council for the Territory of Florida approved the establishment of a new county to be know as "Marion".  Named after Francis Marion, the South Carolina hero of the Revolutionary War. Fort King was designated as the county seat. But since this area was still a military reservation, plans were made to located a new site for the county seat. An area was chosen several miles west of Fort King. The new site was on high ground and had an available water supply from a nearby spring. On February 21, 1846, the Marion County Commissioners passed a resolution that  "the county site of this country shall be known as Ocala".
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