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・ St. Divitianus
・ St. Dominic Catholic Church (Miami, FL)
・ St. Dominic Church in San Francisco
・ St. Dominic College of Asia
・ St. Dominic High School
・ St. Dominic High School (O'Fallon, Missouri)
・ St. Dominic High School (Oyster Bay, New York)
・ St. Dominic Roman Catholic Church (Oyster Bay, New York)
・ St. Dominic Savio Catholic High School
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・ St. Dominic Subdivision
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・ St. Dominic's Church
・ St. Dominic's Church (Bronx, New York)
・ St. Dominic's Church (Denver, Colorado)
St. Cloud, Florida
・ St. Cloud, Minnesota
・ St. Cloud, Minnesota metropolitan area
・ St. Cloud, Missouri
・ St. Cloud, Wisconsin
・ St. Colman's Catholic School
・ St. Colman's Church, Gort
・ St. Colman's College, Fermoy
・ St. Colman's Primary School
・ St. Colman's Roman Catholic Church and Cemetery
・ St. Colmans Community College
・ St. Colmcille's (Balheary)
・ St. Colum's GAA
・ St. Columb's Anglican Church
・ St. Columba Cathedral (Youngstown, Ohio)


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St. Cloud, Florida : ウィキペディア英語版
St. Cloud, Florida

St. Cloud is a city in northern Osceola County, Florida, United States. It is located on the southern shore of East Lake Tohopekaliga in Central Florida, approximately southeast of Orlando. The city population was 35,183 in the 2010 census, and 40,918 in the 2013 census estimate. The city is part of the Orlando–Kissimmee–Sanford metropolitan area.
St. Cloud was originally founded as a retirement community for Civil War union veterans, gaining the nickname "Soldier City."〔
== History ==

During the 1870s, Hamilton Disston of Philadelphia took an interest in developing the region while on fishing trips with Henry Shelton Sanford, founder of the city of Sanford. Disston contracted with the Florida Internal Improvement Fund, then in receivership, to pay $1 million to offset its Civil War and Reconstruction debt. In exchange, Disston would be awarded half the land he drained from the state's swamps. He dug canals and, in 1886-1887, established St. Cloud sugarcane plantation, named after St. Cloud, Minnesota, although many long-time locals state the town was named after Saint-Cloud, France,〔Berman Law Group〕 located fairly close to Paris.
Diston opened the Sugar Belt Railway to the South Florida Railroad in 1888 to carry his product to market. But the Panic of 1893 dropped land values, and the Great Freeze of 1894-1895 ruined the plantation. Disston returned to Philadelphia, where he died in 1896. The Sugar Belt Railway merged into the South Florida Railroad. An attempt to cultivate rice in the area failed, and for several years the land remained fallow. Then in 1909, were acquired by the Seminole Land & Investment Company as the site for a Grand Army of the Republic veterans' colony. St. Cloud was selected because of its "health, climate and productiveness of soil." It was first permanently settled in 1909 by William G. King, a real estate manager from Alachua County who had been given the responsibility "to plan, locate and develop a town."
On April 16, 1909, the Kissimmee Valley Gazette announced the “New Town of St. Cloud,” a “Soldiers Colony” to be near Kissimmee. The newspaper called the purchase by the Seminole Land and Investment Company “one of the most important real estate deals ever made in the State of Florida.” It was reported that the officers of the company had searched all over Florida for the perfect site for a veterans’ colony, particularly one especially suited for “health, climate, and productiveness of the soil.” It is believed that many of the streets were named for states from which the Civil War veterans had served, but the street names were already assigned to the platted land before settlement occurred.〔http://www.stcloudmainstreetflorida.org/history.html〕
On June 1, 1915, the Florida Legislature incorporated St. Cloud as a city. Its downtown features landmark buildings by the Orlando architectural firm of Ryan & Roberts, a partnership consisting of two women. The buildings by Ryan and Roberts and others in the downtown area are predominantly Spanish Revival.〔Dalles, John, "The Pathbreaking Legacy of Ryan and Roberts", in "Reflections", the journal of the Historical Society of Central Florida, Summer 2009; pages 8 and 9.〕
In recent years, St. Cloud has tried to separate itself from neighboring cities, and particularly the theme parks, by promoting an image of small-town life, as well as attempting to make itself economically less dependent on Kissimmee. On March 6, 2006, St. Cloud introduced CyberSpot, a program which gives residents free high-speed wireless Internet access. The city then ended Cyberspot, quoting "it's too costly". The city is served by the Osceola Library System.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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