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Just a short drive from the southern border of Georgia, dominating the north-east comer of Florida, lies Jacksonville, the largest city in area in the forty-eight contiguous states. Indeed, Jacksonville's 840.1 square miles give it more area than New York City and Los Angeles com-bined. But even in a nation that has an almost mystical reverence for numbers and is given to boasting of being the big-gest and the best, statistics tell only part of the story. Numbers can help put things in per-spective sometimes, especially for those whose concept of Florida has been shaped by the image of orange trees and tropical sunsets seen from under swaying palms on the sands of Miami Beach. The most populous city in Florida, with about 585,000 people, Jacksonville ranks third in the southeast and twenty-third in the country. It enjoys four distinct seasons, with few of the temperature extremes of cities lying farther south or to the north. The mean temperature in December, for example, is about fifty-five degrees, while in summer it is eighty degrees. Rainfall averages about fifty-five inches annually, and the city enjoys an average of 277 days of sunshine out of every 365. Jacksonville's history and economy have been shaped by its location near the mouth of the St. Johns River, providing easy access to the Atlantic Ocean and the Intracoastal Waterway, its excellent deep-water port facilities, and its location cen-tral to key markers in the south and south-east. The city lies 350 miles from Miami, the same distance from Atlanta, 390 miles from Charlotte, North Carolina and 450 miles from Birmingham, Alabama. The roots of Jacksonville stretch back to the first stirrings of European explora-tion and conquest of the New World, In April of 1562. only seventy years after the first voyage of Columbus and fifty-eight years before the Pilgrims came ashore at Plymouth, a band of French explorers led by jean Ribault anchored at the mouth of the St. Johns. A year later a colony was established at Fort Caroline, where the river meets the Atlantic, by a band of French Huguenots, marking the first Protestant colony on the continent. Four Seasons in the Sun