The Man Who Built Carrollwood
(Article from
originalcarrollwood.com)
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Matt
Jetton (pronounced "jet-tawn") achieved local and national fame in the late 1950's
as the developer of Original Carrollwood. His company, Sunstate Builders, purchased
325+ acres of citrus nursery land, just seven miles north of the City of Tampa with
a vision of creating housing to relieve crowding in South Tampa. Residents of South
Tampa did not care for the rural surroundings of Carrollwood ("the land of lovely
water"); but it was discovered by the academia at the newly built University of
South Florida located less than ten miles due east. Many prestigious professors and
administrators moved to Carrollwood including John and Mary Allen, USF's first
president.
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Matt Jetton
(pronounced "jet-tawn") achieved local and national fame in the late 1950's as the developer of
Original Carrollwood. His company, Sunstate Builders, purchased 325+ acres of citrus nursery land, just
seven miles north of the City of Tampa with a vision of creating housing to relieve crowding in South
Tampa. Residents of South Tampa did not care for the rural surroundings of Carrollwood ("the land of
lovely water"); but it was discovered by the academia at the newly built University of South Florida
located less than ten miles due east. Many prestigious professors and administrators moved to
Carrollwood including John and Mary Allen, USF's first president.
By 1959, Carrollwood had become one of the foremost award-winning
"subdivisions" in the area and boasted of amenities unheard of at the time, including air conditioned
housing, a planned school, neighborhood parks, lake access for all residents and on-call handy man and
repair services. The winding roads, many cul-de-sacs and lake views added even more charm to our young
community.1960's pricing for homes ranged from $16K-$100K with lots from $2,750 to $16,000.
Developing suburban communities runs in the Jetton family, even though
Matt Jetton has almost no memory of his grandfather, Matthew Jetton . Four decades earlier, Jetton's
grandfather helped expand the Tampa metropolitan area as one of the developers of western Hyde Park,
today known as Historic Hyde Park. One of that neighborhood's original streets is named for the Jetton
family.
The senior Matthew Jetton came to Tampa from Murfreesboro, Tenn., in the
1880s. His middle name was Murfree, after his hometown, and he was often called "M.M.." He first
settled in Tampa Heights and worked in the hardware and lumber businesses. Later he became a contractor
and co-founded the Jetton-Hudnall Lumber Co. He also formed the Jetton-Dekle Lumber Co. with Lee Dekle,
another Historic Hyde Park developer whose name appears on a local street.
Matthew Jetton had a lumber mill near Kennedy Boulevard and Rome Avenue,
his grandson said. He was a member of the Elks Lodge and a founding member of the Tampa Board of Trade,
the forerunner to the Greater Tampa Chamber of Commerce. Matthew Jetton died in 1931 at age 71.
Matt Jetton is now retired and resides in Carrollwood Village (developed
by Jetton in the 1970's after Carrollwood was off and running) He was born and raised in Tampa, during
the mid 1980's served on the Board of County Commissioners and is a member of the Hall of Fame of the
Florida Home Builders Association. Some of his family resides in Original Carrollwood including his
namesake grandson Matt Jetton III.