4A Region 1 XC Championship



Complete Results & Coverage

Photo Album by Ralph Epifanio - Over 450 Photos
Race Footage by Dean Headley

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“What’s in a name?” asks Shakespeare’s Juliet. “A river by any name is just as wet…unless it is not!” answers Ralpheo.

The name Santa Fe is found in many places in northern Florida, all of which can be traced back to (circa) 1610, and the mission of Santa Fe’ de Toloca. Its original site—chosen by Father Martin Prieto—was probably close to a pre-Columbian Timucua village. Here, the Franciscan mission was established to convert, and thereby “save,” the souls of the (estimated) 200,000 Timucua Indians that inhabited this general area. The mission’s emissaries from God, however, inadvertently provided a “shortcut” to heaven. Epidemics, in the form of measles, smallpox, yellow fever, and bubonic plagues--to which Native Americans had no resistance--resulted in “an ethnic cleansing,” and within (roughly) a century, only about 1% (2,000) of the original Timucua society remained.

Named for the mission, the Santa Fe River bubbles up at Lake Santa Fe and flows west for 75 miles through parts of Columbia, Suwannee, Bradford, Baker, Union, Gilchrist, and Alachua counties, before emptying into the Suwannee River, no doubt within sight of Stephen C. Foster’s lyrical—but fictitious—“Old Folks Home” upon the Suwannee (Swanee) River.