Stetson’s lakeside home. Across the lake on its eastern shore is a Volusia County park with hiking and bicycling trails, one which continues for 3 miles to Blue Spring State Park.
A small property on the northwest shore of Lake Beresford is the home of the Sandra Stetson Aquatic Center. This natural lake connects with the St. Johns River and provides an ideal training area for Stetson University's crew teams and others from around the nation.
Across the lake on its eastern shore is a Volusia County park with hiking and bicycling trails. In the late 1700s, the area of the park formed part of a 22,000 acre plantation granted by the English to William Beresford that was worked by enslaved Africans and remained in use until the mid-1800s. Two walking trails lead through expanses of saw palmetto and hardwoods to perfect spots on the lakeshore for watching the setting sun. The right trail is of special historic interest since it once gave residents of DeLand and Orange City access to what was then called Deerfoot Landing, a stop for steam-powered paddleboats that were a vital form of transportation connecting the region to the outside world in the late 1800s when Stetson University was still in its infancy. Little evidence remains of the lake’s rich past apart from a few remaining pieces of the steamship dock and of a spring water bottling plant that once operated here. Stetson University’s new endeavor here adds a new chapter in Lake Beresford’s rich history.
Across the lake on its eastern shore is a Volusia County park with hiking and bicycling trails. In the late 1700s, the area of the park formed part of a 22,000 acre plantation granted by the English to William Beresford that was worked by enslaved Africans and remained in use until the mid-1800s. Two walking trails lead through expanses of saw palmetto and hardwoods to perfect spots on the lakeshore for watching the setting sun. The right trail is of special historic interest since it once gave residents of DeLand and Orange City access to what was then called Deerfoot Landing, a stop for steam-powered paddleboats that were a vital form of transportation connecting the region to the outside world in the late 1800s when Stetson University was still in its infancy. Little evidence remains of the lake’s rich past apart from a few remaining pieces of the steamship dock and of a spring water bottling plant that once operated here. Stetson University’s new endeavor here adds a new chapter in Lake Beresford’s rich history.
Extraordinary Excursions
- Experience the ideal sunset viewing along the eastern shore of the lake
- Cycle along the fabulous paved Spring-to-Spring Trail to Blue Spring
- Explore the site of an old steamboat landing