As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 28, 2003

                                  SCHEDULE 14A
                                 (RULE 14a-101)

                     INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT

                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
                Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
                         Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Filed by the Registrant [X]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [  ]

Check the appropriate box:
[X]   Preliminary Proxy Statement       [  ] Confidential, for Use of the
                                             Commission Only (as permitted by
                                             Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
[  ]  Definitive Proxy Statement
[  ]  Definitive Additional Materials
[  ]  Soliciting Material Pursuant to Rule 14a-12


                     SEACOAST BANKING CORPORATION OF FLORIDA
                (Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if Other Than the Registrant)


Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
   [X] No fee required.
   [ ] Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.

   (1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:__________

       _________________________________________________________________________

   (2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:_____________

       _________________________________________________________________________

   (3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant
       to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee
       is calculated and state how it was determined):__________________________

       _________________________________________________________________________

   (4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:_________________________

   (5) Total fee paid:__________________________________________________________


   [ ] Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
   [ ] Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act
       Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was
       paid previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement
       number, or the form or schedule and the date of its filing.______________

       _________________________________________________________________________

   (1)  Amount previously paid:_________________________________________________

   (2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:____________________________

   (3) Filing Party:____________________________________________________________

   (4) Date Filed:______________________________________________________________







                                        PRELIMINARY PROXY MATERIALS

[OBJECT OMITTED]



                                        March 18, 2003


TO THE SHAREHOLDERS OF
SEACOAST BANKING CORPORATION OF FLORIDA:

     You are cordially invited to attend the 2003 Annual Meeting of Shareholders
of Seacoast Banking Corporation of Florida ("Seacoast" or the "Company"),  which
will be held at the Port St. Lucie Community Center, 2195 S.E. Airoso Boulevard,
Port St. Lucie, Florida, on Thursday, May 1, 2003, at 3:00 P.M., Local Time (the
"Meeting").


     Enclosed  are the Notice of Meeting,  Proxy  Statement,  Proxy and our 2002
Annual Report to Shareholders (the "Annual Report"). At the Meeting, you will be
asked to consider  and vote upon  various  proposals,  which are outlined in the
Notice of Meeting, and which are described in detail in the Proxy Statement.  We
hope you can attend the Meeting and vote your shares in person.  In any case, we
would  appreciate  your  completing the enclosed Proxy and returning it to us as
soon as  possible.  This  action  will  ensure  that  your  preferences  will be
expressed  on the matters that are being  considered.  If you are able to attend
the  Meeting,  you may vote your  shares in person  even if you have  previously
returned your Proxy.


     We want to thank you for your support  this past year.  We are proud of our
progress as  reflected in the results for 2002,  and we encourage  you to review
carefully our Annual Report.

     If you have any questions  about the Proxy  Statement or our Annual Report,
please call or write us.

                                          Sincerely,

                                          GRAPHIC OMITTED][GRAPHIC OMITTED]

                                          Dennis S. Hudson III
                                          President & Chief Executive Officer





                     SEACOAST BANKING CORPORATION OF FLORIDA
                               815 Colorado Avenue
                              Stuart, Florida 34994

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                             TO BE HELD MAY 1, 2003

     Notice is hereby  given that the 2003  Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders  of
Seacoast  Banking  Corporation of Florida  ("Seacoast" or the "Company") will be
held at the Port St. Lucie Community Center,  2195 S.E. Airoso  Boulevard,  Port
St. Lucie,  Florida,  on Thursday,  May 1, 2003,  at 3:00 P.M.,  Local Time (the
"Meeting"), for the following purposes:


     1.   To  re-elect  four  Class I  directors  and to elect two new Class III
          directors;

     2.   To approve an amendment to the Company's  Articles of Incorporation to
          eliminate the existing  shareholder  supermajority voting requirements
          for certain business  combinations so that, after giving effect to the
          amendment, such business combinations may be accomplished either:

                    (a) by the holders of a simple  majority of the  outstanding
                    shares of the  Company's  common  stock that are entitled to
                    vote, provided that the business  combination is approved by
                    (i)  66-2/3%  of the  members  of  the  Company's  Board  of
                    Directors,  and  (ii)  a  majority  of  the  members  of the
                    Company's  Board  of  Directors  who  were  directors  as of
                    February  28, 2003 or who were  otherwise  determined  to be
                    "continuing  directors" by the Company's Board of Directors;
                    or

                    (b) without the prior  approval  of the  Company's  Board of
                    Directors,  provided that the combination is approved by (i)
                    the  holders  of 66-2/3%  of the  outstanding  shares of the
                    Company's  common stock that are entitled to vote,  and (ii)
                    the holders of a majority of the  outstanding  shares of the
                    Company's  common stock that are not owned by the  Company's
                    affiliates   and   persons   that   became  5%  or   greater
                    shareholders of the Company after February 28, 2003;

     3.   To grant the proxy holders discretionary  authority to vote to adjourn
          the  Meeting  for up to 120  days to  allow  for the  solicitation  of
          additional  proxies in the event that  there are  insufficient  shares
          voted at the Meeting,  in person or by proxy,  to approve  Proposal 2;
          and

     4.   To  transact  such other  business  as may  properly  come  before the
          Meeting or any adjournments or postponements thereof.


     The enclosed Proxy Statement explains these proposals in greater detail. We
urge you to read these  materials  carefully.  Appendix A contains a copy of the
Company's proposed Articles of Incorporation, as amended and restated to reflect
the proposed amendment described above.



     Only  shareholders  of record at the close of business on February 28, 2003
are  entitled  to notice  of, and to vote at,  the  Meeting or any  adjournments
thereof.  All shareholders,  whether or not they expect to attend the Meeting in
person,  are requested to complete,  date, sign and return the enclosed Proxy in
the accompanying envelope.

                        By Order of the Board of Directors

                        [GRAPHIC OMITTED][GRAPHIC OMITTED]

                        Dennis S. Hudson III
                        President & Chief Executive Officer

March 18, 2003

PLEASE  COMPLETE,  DATE AND SIGN THE  ENCLOSED  PROXY AND RETURN IT  PROMPTLY TO
SEACOAST IN THE ENVELOPE PROVIDED WHETHER OR NOT YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE MEETING.
IF YOU ATTEND THE MEETING,  YOU MAY VOTE IN PERSON IF YOU WISH, EVEN IF YOU HAVE
PREVIOUSLY RETURNED YOUR PROXY.


                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                                       FOR
                         ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                   OF SEACOAST BANKING CORPORATION OF FLORIDA
                                   May 1, 2003

                                  INTRODUCTION

General


     This Proxy  Statement is being  furnished to the  shareholders  of Seacoast
Banking  Corporation  of  Florida,  a  Florida  corporation  ("Seacoast"  or the
"Company"),  in connection with the  solicitation of proxies by Seacoast's Board
of Directors from holders of Seacoast's common stock ("Common Stock") for use at
the 2003 Annual Meeting of  Shareholders  of Seacoast to be held on May 1, 2003,
and at  any  adjournments  or  postponements  thereof  (the  "Meeting").  Unless
otherwise  clearly  specified,  the terms  "Company" and "Seacoast"  include the
Company and its subsidiaries.

     The  Meeting  is  being  held to  consider  and  vote  upon  the  proposals
summarized  below under  "Summary of Proposals"  and described in greater detail
elsewhere herein.  Seacoast's Board of Directors knows of no other business that
will be  presented  for  consideration  at the  Meeting  other than the  matters
described in this Proxy Statement.

     The  2002  Annual  Report  to  Shareholders  ("Annual  Report"),  including
financial  statements for the fiscal year ended  December 31, 2002,  accompanies
this Proxy Statement. These materials are first being mailed to the shareholders
of Seacoast on or about March 18, 2003.

     The  principal  executive  offices of Seacoast  are located at 815 Colorado
Avenue, Stuart, Florida 34994, and its telephone number is (772) 287-4000.

Summary of Proposals

     The proposals to be considered at the Meeting may be summarized as follows:


     Proposal 1. To re-elect  four Class I directors  and to elect two new Class
III directors;

     Proposal  2.  To  approve  an  amendment  to  the  Company's   Articles  of
Incorporation  to  eliminate  the  existing  shareholder   supermajority  voting
requirements for certain business combinations,  so that, after giving effect to
the amendment, such business combinations may be accomplished either:

     (a) by the holders of a simple  majority of the  outstanding  shares of the
Company's  common  stock that are entitled to vote,  provided  that the business
combination is approved by (i) 66-2/3% of the members of the Company's  Board of
Directors,  and  (ii) a  majority  of the  members  of the  Company's  Board  of
Directors  who were  directors  as of February  28,  2003 or who were  otherwise
determined to be "continuing directors" by the Company's Board of Directors; or

     (b)  without  the  prior  approval  of the  Company's  Board of  Directors,
provided that the  combination  is approved by (i) the holders of 66-2/3% of the
outstanding  shares of the Company's common stock that are entitled to vote, and
(ii) the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares of the Company's common
stock that are not owned by the Company's  affiliates and persons that became 5%
or greater shareholders of the Company after February 28, 2003; and

     Proposal 3. To grant the proxy holders  discretionary  authority to vote to
adjourn  the  Meeting  for up to 120  days  to  allow  for the  solicitation  of
additional proxies in the event that there are insufficient  shares voted at the
Meeting, in person or by proxy, to approve Proposal 2; and

     Proposal 4. To transact such other business as may properly come before the
Meeting or any adjournments or postponements thereof.


Quorum and Voting Requirements


     Holders of record of shares of the Company's Common Stock, as of the Record
Date (as defined  below) are entitled to one vote per share on each matter to be
considered  and voted upon at the  Meeting.  As of the Record  Date,  there were
13,949,905  total votes  entitled  to be cast by the holders of the  outstanding
Common Stock.

     To hold a vote on any  proposal,  a  quorum  must be  present,  which  is a
majority  of  the  total  votes  entitled  to be  cast  by  the  holders  of the
outstanding  shares of Common Stock.  In determining  whether a quorum exists at
the  Meeting  for  purposes  of all  matters to be voted on, all votes  "for" or
"against," as well as all abstentions and broker non-votes,  will be counted.  A
"broker non-vote" occurs when a nominee does not have discretionary voting power
with  respect  to that  proposal  and has not  received  instructions  from  the
beneficial owner.

     Proposals 1 and 3 require  approval by a  "plurality"  of the votes cast by
the holders of the  outstanding  shares of Common Stock  entitled to vote in the
election.  This means that Proposals 1 and 3 will be approved only if more votes
cast at the Meeting are voted in favor of each of the  proposals  than are voted
against them. Neither  abstentions nor broker non-votes will be counted as votes
cast for purposes of  determining  whether  Proposal 1 has  received  sufficient
votes for approval.

     Proposal  2 requires  approval  by the  affirmative  vote of 66-2/3% of all
votes entitled to be cast at the Meeting.  Both abstentions and broker non-votes
will have the same  effect as votes  cast  against  Proposal 2 for  purposes  of
determining whether the Proposal has received sufficient votes for approval.

     Unless  otherwise  required by the Company's  Articles of  Incorporation or
Bylaws, or by applicable law, any other proposal that is properly brought before
the Meeting  will  require  approval by the  affirmative  vote of a plurality of
votes  cast  at  the  Meeting.  With  respect  to  any  such  proposal,  neither
abstentions  nor broker  non-votes will be counted as votes cast for purposes of
determining whether the proposal has received sufficient votes for approval.

     Directors  and  executive   officers  of  the  Company   beneficially  hold
approximately 22.91% of all the votes entitled to be cast at the Meeting.


Record Date, Solicitation and Revocability of Proxies


     The Board of  Directors  of  Seacoast  has fixed the close of  business  on
February  28,  2003 as the  record  date  ("Record  Date") for  determining  the
shareholders  entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the  Meeting.  Accordingly,
only  holders  of record of shares of Common  Stock on the  Record  Date will be
entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Meeting.  At the close of business on
such date, there were 13,949,905  shares of Common Stock issued and outstanding,
which were held by approximately 897 holders of record.

     Shares of Common Stock represented by properly  executed  Proxies,  if such
Proxies are  received in time and not  revoked,  will be voted at the Meeting in
accordance  with the  instructions  indicated in such Proxy. If a valid Proxy is
returned and no instructions are indicated,  such shares of Common Stock will be
voted FOR Proposals 1, 2 and 3, and in the  discretion of the proxy holder as to
any other matter that may come properly before the Meeting.

     A shareholder  who has given a Proxy may revoke it at any time prior to its
exercise at the Meeting by either (i) giving written notice of revocation to the
Secretary of Seacoast,  (ii)  properly  submitting  to Seacoast a duly  executed
Proxy  bearing a later  date,  or (iii)  appearing  in person at the Meeting and
voting in person. All written notices of revocation or other communications with
respect to  revocation  of Proxies  should be  addressed  as  follows:  Seacoast
Banking  Corporation of Florida,  815 Colorado  Avenue,  Stuart,  Florida 34994,
Attention: Sharon Mehl, Secretary.



                                   PROPOSAL 1

                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

General


     The Meeting is being held to,  among other  things,  re-elect  four Class I
directors  of  Seacoast,  each to  serve a  three  year  term  and  until  their
successors  have  been  elected  and  qualified,  and to elect two new Class III
directors,  each to serve a two year term and until their  successors  have been
elected and qualified. All of the nominees, except Messrs. Stephen E. Bohner and
T. Michael Crook, are presently directors of Seacoast.  All of the nominees also
serve as members of the Board of Directors  of  Seacoast's  banking  subsidiary,
First  National Bank and Trust Company of the Treasure  Coast (the "Bank").  The
members  of the Boards of  Directors  of the Bank and the  Company  are the same
except for Marian B.  Monroe,  and the two  nominees,  Stephen E.  Bohner and T.
Michael Crook, who are members of the Bank's Board only.

     As provided in Seacoast's Articles of Incorporation, the Company's Board of
Directors is divided into three  classes:  Class I directors,  who presently are
serving a term expiring at the Company's  2003 annual  meeting of  shareholders;
Class II  directors,  who presently are serving a term expiring at the Company's
2004 annual meeting of shareholders;  and Class III directors, who presently are
serving a term  ending at the  Company's  2005 annual  meeting of  shareholders.
Currently, the Board is classified as follows:


Class                    Term                           Names of Directors

Class I     Term Expires at the 2003 Annual Meeting     Jeffrey C. Bruner
                                                        Christopher E. Fogal
                                                        Dale M. Hudson
                                                        John R. Santarsiero, Jr.

Class II    Term Expires at the 2004 Annual Meeting     John H. Crane
                                                        Jeffrey S. Furst
                                                        Dennis S. Hudson, Jr.
                                                        Thomas H. Thurlow, Jr.

Class III   Term Expires at the 2005 Annual Meeting     Evans Crary, Jr.
                                                        A. Douglas Gilbert
                                                        Dennis S. Hudson, III


     Upon approval of Proposal 1, the Class I directors will be re-elected for a
three year term expiring at the 2006 Company annual meeting of shareholders, and
Messrs.  Stephen E. Bohner and T. Michael  Crook will become newly elected Class
III  directors  and serve a term ending at the 2005  Company  annual  meeting of
shareholders.

     All shares  represented by valid  Proxies,  and not revoked before they are
exercised, will be voted in the manner specified therein. If no specification is
made,  the Proxies  will be voted FOR the  election of each of the six  nominees
listed  below.  Although all  nominees are expected to serve if elected,  if any
nominee is unable to serve, then the persons designated as Proxies will vote for
the remaining nominees and for such replacements, if any, as may be nominated by
Seacoast's  Nominating/Governance  Committee.  Proxies  cannot  be  voted  for a
greater  number of persons  than the number of  nominees  specified  herein (six
persons). Cumulative voting is not permitted.

     The affirmative vote of the holders of shares of Common Stock  representing
a  plurality  of the votes  cast at the  Meeting at which a quorum is present is
required for the election of the directors listed below.

     The nominees have been  nominated by Seacoast's  Board of Directors and the
Board  unanimously  recommends  a vote "FOR" the  election  of all six  nominees
listed below.

     The  following  table  sets  forth  the  name and age of each  nominee  for
director,  as well as each  incumbent  director  who is not a  nominee  and each
executive  officer of the Company who is not a director or nominee,  the year in
which he was first elected a director or executive officer,  as the case may be,
a  description  of his position  and offices with  Seacoast or the Bank, a brief
description of his principal occupation and business experience,  and the number
of shares of Common Stock beneficially owned by him as of February 28, 2003. See
"Information About the Board of Directors and Its Committees."







Name, Age, Director Class                                                               Shares of Common Stock
and Year First Elected or                                                               Beneficially Owned and
Appointed a Director or           Information About Nominees                            Percentage of Common Stock
Executive Officer                 for Director                                          Outstanding (I)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                       
Stephen E. Bohner (50)            Mr. Bohner has  been President and owner of                      300  (2)
Class III, 2003                   Premier  Realty  Group, a real estate company
                                  located in Sewalls Point, Florida,since 1987.

Jeffrey C. Bruner (52)            Mr. Bruner has been a self-employed real                      21,690  (2)(4)
Class I, 1983 (3)                 estate investor in Stuart, Florida since 1972.

T. Michael Crook (55)             Mr. Crook has been a principal with the public                 3,658  (2)
Class III, 2003 (3)               accounting firm of  Procter, Crook &  Crowder,
                                  CPA, P.A.,  located in Stuart, Florida, since
                                  1979. He was  previously a director of Barnett
                                  Bank's local advisory board for 16 years.

Christopher E. Fogal (51)         Mr. Fogal, a certified public accountant, has                 20,034  (2)(5)
Class I, 1997                     been a managing partner of Fogal,Lynch,
                                  Johnson & Long, a public accounting firm,
                                  since 1979.


Dale M. Hudson (68)               Mr. Hudson was named Chairman of Seacoast in               1,504,255  (7)
Class I, 1983 (6)                 June 1998.  He previously served as Chief                     10.78%
                                  Executive Officer of Seacoast from 1992, as
                                  Chairman of the Board of the Bank from
                                  September 1992.


John R. Santarsiero, Jr. (58)     Mr.  Santarsiero has been a private investor                  23,346  (2)
Class I, 1983                     since __________.



                                  Information About Incumbent Directors
                                  -------------------------------------

John H. Crane (73)                Mr. Crane  is  retired,  but served as  Vice                  29,907  (2)(8)
Class II, 1983                    President of C&W  Fish  Company,  Inc., a fish
                                  processing plant located in the Stuart,Florida
                                  area,from 1982 through 2000. He also served as
                                  President of Krauss & Crane, Inc., an
                                  electrical contracting firm located in Stuart,
                                  Florida from 1957 through 1997.








                                                                                        Shares of Common Stock
Name, Age, Director Class and                                                           Beneficially Owned and
Year First Elected or Appointed                                                         Percentage of Common Stock
a Director or Executive Officer   Information About Incumbent Directors                 Outstanding
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                  
Evans Crary, Jr. (73)             Mr. Crary is  a  retired  partner of  Crary,                  18,786  (2)
Class III, 1983                   Buchanan, Bowdish, Bovie,  Beres,  Negron  &
                                  Thomas, Chartered (Crary-Buchanan), a law firm
                                  located in  Stuart, Florida.  Mr.  Crary  has
                                  practiced law in Stuart, Florida, since 1952.

Jeffrey S. Furst (58)             Mr. Furst was elected  Property  Appraiser for               141,590  (9)
Class II, 1997                    St. Lucie County, Florida in 2000. He has been                 1.01%
                                  a real estate broker since 1973 and is the
                                  former owner of Sun Realty, Inc.in Port St.
                                  Lucie, Florida.


A. Douglas Gilbert (62)           Mr.  Gilbert, Senior Executive Vice President                139,557  (10)
Class III, 1990                   of Seacoast, was named Chief Operating Officer                 1.00%
                                  of Seacoast and Presidentof the Bank in June
                                  1998. Mr. Gilbert has served as Chief Credit
                                  Officer of Seacoast since July 1990, and was
                                  Chief Banking Officer from September 1992 to
                                  October 1995. He was named Chief Operating and
                                  Credit Officer of the Bank in October 1994.


Dennis S. Hudson, Jr. (75)        Mr.  Hudson served as Chairman of the Board of             1,223,361  (11)
Class II, 1983 (6)                Seacoast from 1990 to  June 1998, when he                      8.77%
                                  retired.


Dennis S. Hudson, III (47)        Mr.  Hudson  was  named President and  Chief               1,245,960  (12)
Class III, 1984 (6)               Executive Officer of Seacoast in June 1998 and                 8.93%
                                  has served as Chief Executive Officer of the
                                  Bank since 1992. Previously, he was Chief
                                  Operating Officer of Seacoast from 1990 and
                                  President of the Bank from 1992.


Thomas H. Thurlow, Jr. (66)       Mr. Thurlow has been an officer and a director                34,422  (2)(13)
Class II, 1983 (6)                of Thurlow & Thurlow, P.A., a law firm in
                                  Stuart, Florida, since 1981, and has practiced
                                  law in Stuart, Florida since 1961.

                                  Information About Executive Officers
                                  Who Are Not Also Directors or Nominees:
                                  ---------------------------------------

C. William Curtis, Jr. (64)       Mr. Curtis, Senior Executive Vice President of               129,167  (2)(14)
1995                              Seacoast and the Bank, has served as Chief
                                  Banking Officer of Seacoast and the Bank since
                                  October 1995, and was named President of the
                                  Bank's Indian River County operations in
                                  October 1999. Mr. Curtis formerly was the Area
                                  President of First Union Bank in Sarasota and
                                  Manatee Counties, a $970 million banking unit
                                  with 21 offices.


William R. Hahl (54)              Mr. Hahl,  Executive Vice President/Finance                   64,150  (2)(15)
1990                              Group, has served as the Chief Financial
                                  Officer of Seacoast and the Bank since July
                                  1990.


Nominees and executive                                                                       3,580,084
  officers as a group
      (15 persons)                                                                              25.66%
----------------------




(1)  Information  relating to beneficial  ownership of Common Stock by directors
     is based  upon  information  furnished  by each  person  using  "beneficial
     ownership"  concepts set forth in the rules of the  Securities and Exchange
     Commission  ("SEC") under the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended
     (the "1934 Act").  Under such rules, a person is deemed to be a "beneficial
     owner" of a security if that  person has or shares  "voting  power,"  which
     includes  the  power to vote or direct  the  voting  of such  security,  or
     "investment power," which includes the power to dispose of or to direct the
     disposition of such security.  The person is also deemed to be a beneficial
     owner  of any  security  of  which  that  person  has a  right  to  acquire
     beneficial ownership within 60 days. Under such rules, more than one person
     may be deemed to be a beneficial owner of the same securities, and a person
     may be deemed to be a beneficial  owner of securities as to which he or she
     may disclaim any beneficial ownership.  Accordingly,  nominees are named as
     beneficial  owners of shares as to which they may disclaim  any  beneficial
     interest.  Except as  indicated  in other  notes to this  table  describing
     special  relationships  with other persons and specifying  shared voting or
     investment  power,  directors possess sole voting and investment power with
     respect to all shares of Common Stock set forth opposite their names.

(2)  Less than 1%.

(3)  Mr. Crook is married to Mr. Bruner's sister.

(4)  Includes 810 shares held jointly with Mr. Bruner's wife,  6,450 shares held
     by Mr.  Bruner as  custodian  for his son,  and 12,000  shares  held by Mr.
     Bruner as custodian for his two nephews,  as to which shares Mr. Bruner may
     be deemed to share both voting and investment power.

(5)  All 20,034  shares are held  jointly  with Mr.  Fogal's  wife,  as to which
     shares Mr. Fogal may be deemed to share both voting and investment power.

(6)  Dennis S. Hudson,  Jr. and Dale M. Hudson are  brothers.  Dale M. Hudson is
     married to the sister of Thomas H. Thurlow,  Jr.  Dennis S. Hudson,  III is
     the son of Dennis S. Hudson, Jr. and the nephew of Dale M. Hudson.

(7)  Includes  1,323,747 shares held by Monroe Partners,  Ltd., a family limited
     partnership  ("Monroe  Partners") of which Mr. Hudson and his wife, Mary T.
     Hudson, are general partners. Mr. Hudson may be deemed to share both voting
     and  investment  power with  respect to such shares with the other  general
     partner, and as to which Mr. Hudson disclaims beneficial ownership,  except
     to the extent of his 50% interest in Monroe Partners. Also includes 180,508
     shares held jointly with Mr.  Hudson's  wife, as to which shares Mr. Hudson
     may be deemed to share voting and investment power.

(8)  All 29,907  shares are held  jointly  with Mr.  Crane's  wife,  as to which
     shares Mr. Crane may be deemed to share both voting and investment power.

(9)  Includes 18,207 shares held by the trustee for the IRA of Mr. Furst, 85,155
     shares held jointly with Mr. Furst's wife, and 600 shares held jointly with
     Mr.  Furst's  mother,  as to which  shares Mr. Furst may be deemed to share
     both voting and investment  power.  Also includes 19,347 shares held by Mr.
     Furst's  wife,  and 3,642  shares  held  jointly  by Mr.  Furst's  wife and
     mother-in-law,  as to which  shares  Mr.  Furst may be deemed to share both
     voting and  investment  power and as to which  shares Mr.  Furst  disclaims
     beneficial ownership.

(10) Includes  18,936 shares held jointly with Mr.  Gilbert's  wife, as to which
     shares Mr. Gilbert may be deemed to share voting and investment power. Also
     includes 600 shares held in Mr.  Gilbert's IRA and 110,064  shares that Mr.
     Gilbert has the right to acquire by exercising options that are exercisable
     within 60 days after the Record Date.  Also includes 300 shares held by Mr.
     Gilbert's wife and 300 shares held by Mr. Gilbert's son, as to which shares
     Mr. Gilbert may be deemed to share both voting and investment  power and as
     to which shares Mr. Gilbert disclaims beneficial ownership.

(11) Includes 1,019,799 shares held by Sherwood Partners, Ltd., a family limited
     partnership  ("Sherwood  Partners") of which Mr. Hudson,  his wife, Anne P.
     Hudson, and his son, Dennis S. Hudson,  III, are general partners,  and Mr.
     Hudson, his wife and certain trusts are limited partners. Mr. Hudson may be
     deemed to share  voting and  investment  power with  respect to such shares
     with the  other  general  partners,  and as to which Mr.  Hudson  disclaims
     beneficial  ownership,  except to the extent of his  interest  in  Sherwood
     Partners.  Also includes  142,251  shares held by Mr.  Hudson's wife, as to
     which shares Mr. Hudson may be deemed to share voting and investment  power
     and as to which Mr. Hudson disclaims beneficial ownership.

(12) Includes 1,019,799 shares held by Sherwood Partners of which Mr. Hudson and
     his mother and  father,  Anne P.  Hudson and  Dennis S.  Hudson,  Jr.,  are
     general  partners.  Mr. Hudson may be deemed to share voting and investment
     power with respect to such shares with the other general  partners,  and as
     to which Mr. Hudson disclaims beneficial ownership, except to the extent of
     his 1% interest in Sherwood  Partners  and as sole  trustee of four grantor
     trusts that  collectively  own a 43.8% limited  interest in the partnership
     and of  which  he is one of four  remainder  beneficiaries.  Also  includes
     47,100 shares held jointly with Mr. Hudson's wife and 22,000 shares held by
     Mr.  Hudson's  wife,  as to which shares Mr.  Hudson may be deemed to share
     voting and investment  power.  Also includes 138,000 shares that Mr. Hudson
     has the right to acquire by exercising  options that are exercisable within
     60 days after the Record Date.

(13) Includes 4,725 shares owned by Mr.  Thurlow's  wife, as to which shares Mr.
     Thurlow  may be deemed to share both  voting  and  investment  power.  Also
     includes  20,250  shares  held in trust for the  benefit  of Mr.  Thurlow's
     mother, as to which Mr. Thurlow,  as trustee,  may be deemed to have voting
     and  investment  power with respect to such  shares.  Also  includes  4,755
     shares held by Mr. Thurlow's mother, as to which shares Mr. Thurlow and his
     sister hold power of attorney and  therefore  may be deemed to share voting
     and investment power.

(14) Includes 38,679 shares held by Mr. Curtis' wife and 100 shares held jointly
     by Mr. Curtis' wife, daughters and daughter-in-laws, as to which shares Mr.
     Curtis may be deemed to share voting and  investment  power.  Also includes
     84,000  shares  that Mr.  Curtis  has the right to  acquire  by  exercising
     options that are exercisable within 60 days after the Record Date.

(15) Includes  12,085  shares held jointly  with Mr.  Hahl's wife and 240 shares
     held by Mr. Hahl as custodian  for his  granddaughters,  as to which shares
     Mr.  Hahl may be deemed to share both  voting and  investment  power.  Also
     includes 51,825 shares that Mr. Hahl has the right to acquire by exercising
     options that are exercisable within 60 days after the Record Date.


Information About the Board of Directors and Its Committees

     The Board of  Directors  of  Seacoast  held  eight  meetings  during  2002.
Seacoast's  Board of Directors  has three  standing  committees:  the Salary and
Benefits Committee, the Audit Committee and the Nominating/Governance Committee.
The Salary and Benefits  Committee and the Audit  Committee  both serve the same
functions for the Company and the Bank.  All directors  attended at least 75% of
the total number of meetings of the Board of Directors and attended at least 75%
of the meetings of the Board committees on which they served.


     In  addition,  the Bank's  Board of Directors  has the  following  standing
committees:  Executive Committee,  Investment Committee, Trust Committee and the
Directors  Loan  Committee.  Such  committees  perform those duties  customarily
performed by similar committees at other financial institutions.


     Company's  Salary and  Benefits  Committee  is  composed  of Messrs.  Crary
(Chairman),  Bohner,  Bruner,  Furst,  Dennis S.  Hudson,  Jr. and  Santarsiero.
Messrs.  Bruner and Dennis S. Hudson, Jr. have resigned as members of the Salary
and Benefits Committee, effective immediately following the Meeting, to increase
the Committee's independence.  This Committee has the authority to determine the
compensation of the Company's and the Bank's  executive  officers and employees,
and administers  various aspects of the Company's  benefit and incentive  plans.
This Committee has the power to interpret the provisions of the Company's Profit
Sharing Plan,  Employee Stock Purchase Plan, the Seacoast Banking Corporation of
Florida 1991 Stock Option and Stock Appreciation Right Plan (the "1991 Incentive
Plan"),  the Seacoast  Banking  Corporation of Florida 1996 Long-Term  Incentive
Plan (the "1996 Incentive  Plan"),  the Seacoast Banking  Corporation of Florida
2000 Long-Term  Incentive Plan (the "2000  Incentive  Plan"),  the  Non-Employee
Directors Stock Compensation Plan (the "Directors Stock Plan") and the Executive
Deferred  Compensation Plan (the "Compensation  Deferral Plan").  This Committee
held two meetings in 2002. See "Salary and Benefits Committee Report."

     The Audit Committee is composed of Messrs.  Fogal (Chairman),  Crane, Crary
and Crook,  and has the  responsibility  of  reviewing  Seacoast  and the Bank's
financial statements, evaluating internal accounting controls, reviewing reports
of  regulatory  authorities  and  determining  that all audits and  examinations
required by law are  performed.  It  recommends to the Board of Directors of the
Company the  appointment of the  independent  auditors for the next fiscal year,
reviews and approves their audit plan and reviews with the independent  auditors
the results of the audit and management's  response thereto. The Audit Committee
also  reviews the  adequacy of the  internal  audit  budget and  personnel,  the
internal  audit  plan and  schedule,  and  results  of audits  performed  by the
internal  audit staff.  The Audit  Committee is  responsible  for overseeing the
entire audit function and appraising the  effectiveness of internal and external
audit  efforts.  The Audit  Committee  periodically  reports its findings to the
Board of Directors. The Audit Committee met seven times during 2002.

     During  2002,  the  entire  Board of  Directors  served  as the  Nominating
Committee  for the  purpose  of  nominating  persons  to serve  on the  Board of
Directors.  The  Board  held  one  meeting  in its  capacity  as the  Nominating
Committee during 2002. Effective __________,  2003, the Nominating Committee was
replaced  with the  newly-formed  Nominating/Governance  Committee  composed  of
Messrs.  Furst (Chairman),  Bohner and Santarsiero,  all of whom are independent
directors.  The  purpose of the  Nominating/Governance  Committee  is to conduct
reviews, investigations and evaluations, make recommendations,  develop policies
or guidelines  and take other actions  regarding the  composition  of Seacoast's
Board  of  Directors,   effectiveness  and  succession,   regulatory  and  legal
compliance,  and governance and conduct matters.  While nominees  recommended by
shareholders  may be  considered,  the  Nominating/Governance  Committee has not
actively  solicited  recommendations  and has not established any procedures for
this purpose.


     Board  members  who are not  executive  officers of the Company are paid an
annual retainer of $20,000 for their service as directors of the Company and its
subsidiaries. In addition to the annual retainers, outside Board members receive
$600 for each Board meeting  attended,  $600 for each committee meeting attended
and $700 for each committee meeting chaired.






Executive Officers


     Executive officers are appointed annually at the organizational  meeting of
the respective Boards of Directors of Seacoast and the Bank following the annual
meetings  of  shareholders,  to serve  until the next  annual  meeting and until
successors  are chosen and  qualified.  The table set forth under "- Election of
Directors" lists the nominees for election to the Board of Directors,  directors
of Seacoast who are not nominees  and the Named  Executive  Officers (as defined
below) of Seacoast  and the Bank who are not nominees to or members of the Board
of Directors,  their ages and  respective  offices held by them, the period each
such position has been held, a brief account of their business experience for at
least the past five years, and the number of shares of Common Stock beneficially
owned by each of them on February 28, 2003.


Management Stock Ownership


     As of February 28, 2003, based on available information,  all directors and
executive  officers  of  Seacoast  as a group (15  persons)  beneficially  owned
approximately 3,196,195 outstanding shares of Common Stock,  constituting 22.91%
of the  total  number  of  shares of  Common  Stock  outstanding  at that  date.
Seacoast's directors and executive officers beneficially owned, as of that date,
outstanding  shares of Common Stock  having  3,196,195  votes,  or 22.91% of the
total  votes  represented  by Common  Stock  outstanding  on the Record Date and
entitled to vote at the Annual  Meeting.  In  addition,  as of the Record  Date,
various subsidiaries of Seacoast,  as fiduciaries,  custodians,  and agents, had
sole or shared voting power over ___________  outstanding  shares,  or _____% of
the issued and outstanding  shares,  of Seacoast Common Stock,  including shares
held as trustee or agent of various Seacoast employee benefit and stock purchase
plans.  See "Quorum and Voting  Requirements,"  "Record Date,  Solicitation  and
Revocability of Proxies" and "- Principal Shareholders."



                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION


     Under  rules  established  by the SEC,  the  Company is required to provide
certain data and information in regard to the compensation and benefits provided
to its chief executive officer and other executive officers,  including the four
other most  highly  compensated  executive  officers  (collectively,  the "Named
Executive  Officers").  The  disclosure  requirements  for the  Named  Executive
Officers  include the use of tables and a report  explaining  the  rationale and
considerations  that  led  to  fundamental  executive   compensation   decisions
affecting these individuals.

     The  following  report  reflects  Seacoast's   compensation  philosophy  as
endorsed by the Board of  Directors  and the Salary and Benefits  Committee  and
resulting  actions  taken by Seacoast  for the  reporting  periods  shown in the
various  compensation  tables  supporting  the report.  The Salary and  Benefits
Committee  either  approves  or  recommends  to the Board of  Directors  payment
amounts  and  award   levels  for   executive   officers  of  Seacoast  and  its
subsidiaries.

Salary and Benefits Committee Report


      General

     The Salary and Benefits  Committee of the Board of Directors is composed of
six  members,  none of whom were  officers or employees of Seacoast or the Bank.
Messrs.  Bruner and Dennis S.  Hudson,  Jr.  have  resigned  from the Salary and
Benefits Committee, effective immediately following the Meeting, to increase the
Committee's  independence.  The Board of  Directors  designates  the members and
Chairman of such committee.


      Compensation Policy

     The  policies  that govern the Salary and  Benefits  Committee's  executive
compensation  decisions are designed to align changes in total compensation with
changes in the value  created  for the  Company's  shareholders.  The Salary and
Benefits  Committee  believes that compensation of executive officers and others
should be  directly  linked to  Seacoast's  operating  performance  and that the
achievement of performance  objectives  over time is the primary  determinant of
share price.

     The   underlying   objectives  of  the  Salary  and  Benefits   Committee's
compensation  strategy are to establish  incentives  for certain  executives and
others to achieve and maintain  short-term and long-term  operating  performance
goals  for  Seacoast,  to  link  executive  and  shareholder  interests  through
equity-based  plans,  and to  provide a  compensation  package  that  recognizes
individual  contributions  as well as overall  business  results.  At  Seacoast,
performance-based   executive  officer  compensation   includes:   base  salary,
short-term annual cash incentives, and long-term stock and cash incentives.


      Base Salary and Increases

     In establishing  executive  officer  salaries and increases,  the Committee
considers   individual   annual   performance  and  the  relationship  of  total
compensation to the defined salary market.  The decision to increase base pay is
recommended  by the chief  executive  officer  and  approved  by the  Salary and
Benefits  Committee using performance  results documented and measured annually.
Information  regarding  salaries paid in the market is obtained  through  formal
salary  surveys and other means,  and is used to evaluate  competitiveness  with
Seacoast's peers and competitors.  Seacoast's  general  philosophy is to provide
base pay competitive with the market, and to reward individual performance while
positioning salaries consistent with Company performance.


      Short-Term Incentives

     Seacoast's  Key  Manager  Incentive  Plan  seeks to align  short-term  cash
compensation  with individual  performance and performance for the shareholders.
Funding for this annual  incentive plan is dependent on Seacoast first attaining
a defined  performance  threshold for earnings per share. Once this threshold is
attained,  the Salary and Benefits  Committee,  using  recommendations  from the
Company's  chief executive  officer,  approves awards to those officers who have
made superior  contributions  to Company  profitability as measured and reported
through  individual  performance goals established at the beginning of the year.
As  specified  in the plan,  the payout  schedule  is  designed to pay a smaller
number of officers the highest level of funded cash  incentives to ensure that a
meaningful  reward  is  provided  to the  organization's  top  performers.  This
philosophy  better controls overall  compensation  expenses by reducing the need
for significant  annual base salary increases as a reward for past  performance,
and places  more  emphasis on annual  profitability  and the  potential  rewards
associated  with  future  performance.  Salary  market  information  is  used to
establish  competitive  rewards  that are  adequate in size to  motivate  strong
individual  performance  during the year. The Key Manager Incentive Plan paid an
aggregate of $702,500 in 2002, which was distributed among 15 persons.






      Long-Term Incentives

     Stock options granted under Seacoast's  long-term incentive plans, the 1991
Incentive Plan and the 1996 Incentive  Plan, are designed to motivate  sustained
high levels of individual  performance  and align the interests of key employees
with those of the Company's  shareholders by rewarding capital  appreciation and
earnings growth.  Upon the  recommendation of the chief executive  officer,  and
subject to  approval by the Salary and  Benefits  Committee,  stock  options are
awarded  periodically  to  those  key  officers  whose  performance  has  made a
significant  contribution to Seacoast's  long-term growth. No stock options were
awarded in 2002.


      Deduction Limit

     At this time, because of its compensation levels,  Seacoast does not appear
to be at risk of losing  deductions  under  Section  162(m)  of the Code,  which
generally establishes,  with certain exceptions, a $1 million deduction limit on
executive  compensation for all publicly held companies.  As a result,  Seacoast
has not established a formal policy  regarding such limit, but will evaluate the
necessity for developing such a policy in the future.


      Chief Executive Pay

     The Salary and Benefits Committee formally reviews the compensation paid to
the chief  executive  officers  of the  Company  and the Bank  during  the first
quarter of each year. Final approval of chief executive  compensation is made by
the Board of  Directors.  Changes in base  salary and the  awarding  of cash and
stock incentives are based on overall  financial  performance and  profitability
related to objectives stated in the Company's strategic performance plan and the
initiatives  taken to direct  the  Company.  In  addition,  utilizing  published
surveys,  databases,  and proxy statement data, including,  for example,  public
information  compiled from the SNL Executive  Compensation  Review and the Wyatt
Financial Institution Benchmark  Compensation Report (collectively,  the "Survey
Data"),  the Salary and Benefits  Committee  surveyed the total  compensation of
chief executive officers of comparable-sized  financial  institutions located in
comparable markets  nationally,  as well as of locally-based  banks and thrifts.
While  there  is  likely  to be a  substantial  overlap  between  the  financial
institutions  included in the Survey Data and the banks and thrifts  represented
in the Nasdaq  Bank  Index line on the  shareholder  return  performance  graph,
below,  the groups are not exactly the same.  The Salary and Benefits  Committee
believes that most direct  competitors for executive  talent are not necessarily
the same as the companies that would be included in the published industry index
established for comparing shareholder returns.

     After reviewing the Survey Data, the salary for Mr. Dennis S. Hudson,  III,
President and Chief Executive  Officer of Seacoast,  was increased by $20,100 to
$422,100  annually,  beginning in 2002. This adjustment  maintained Mr. Hudson's
total  compensation at the median of the comparative  groups.  Based on specific
accomplishments and the overall financial performance of Seacoast, including the
achievement of targeted  performance goals in 2002, Mr. Hudson III was awarded a
cash incentive award of $125,000 for 2002 under the Key Manager Incentive Plan.


      Summary

     In summary,  the Salary and Benefits  Committee  believes  that  Seacoast's
compensation  program is reasonable and competitive  with  compensation  paid by
other financial  institutions of similar size. The program is designed to reward
managers for strong personal,  Company and share value  performance.  The Salary
and Benefits  Committee monitors the various guidelines that make up the program
and  reserves  the right to adjust them as necessary to continue to meet Company
and shareholder objectives.

         Salary and Benefits Committee:

         Evans Crary, Jr., Chairman             Jeffrey S. Furst
         Stephen E. Bohner                      Dennis S. Hudson, Jr.
         Jeffrey C. Bruner                      John R. Santarsiero, Jr.




March 18, 2003






Audit Committee Report


     The Audit Committee monitors the Company's  financial  reporting process on
behalf of the Board of Directors.  The Audit Committee  operates under a written
charter  adopted by the Board of Directors on June 20,  2000,  and  subsequently
revised on March 21, 2001.  The Audit  Committee's  charter was published in its
entirety as Exhibit A to the Company's 2001 Proxy Statement. This report reviews
the actions taken by the Audit Committee with regard to the Company's  financial
reporting  process  during 2002 and  particularly  with regard to the  Company's
audited  consolidated  financial statements as of December 31, 2002 and 2001 and
for the three years in the period ended December 31, 2002.

     The Audit Committee currently is composed of four persons,  all of whom are
"independent,"  as defined by the National  Association  of Securities  Dealers,
Inc.  ("NASD").  None of the  committee  members  is or has been an  officer  or
employee of the Company or any of its subsidiaries,  has engaged in any business
transaction or has any business or family  relationship  with the Company or any
of its subsidiaries or affiliates.  The Audit Committee also serves as the audit
committee of the Bank,  and one of its  members,  T.  Michael  Crook,  is a Bank
director and a director nominee under Proposal 1.

     The Company's  management has the primary  responsibility for the Company's
financial  statements and reporting  process,  including the systems of internal
controls and reporting.  The Company's  independent auditors are responsible for
performing  an  independent  audit  of  the  Company's   consolidated  financial
statements in accordance with generally  accepted auditing standards and issuing
a report  thereon.  The  Audit  Committee's  responsibility  is to  monitor  the
integrity of the Company's  financial  reporting  process and system of internal
controls  and to monitor  the  independence  and  performance  of the  Company's
independent auditors and internal auditors.

     The  Audit  Committee  believes  that it has  taken  the  actions  it deems
necessary or  appropriate  to fulfill its oversight  responsibilities  under the
Audit  Committee's  charter.  To  carry  out  its  responsibilities,  the  Audit
Committee met seven times during 2002.

     In fulfilling its oversight responsibilities,  the Audit Committee reviewed
with management the audited financial statements to be included in the Company's
Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the year ended  December 31,  2002,  including a
discussion of the quality (rather than just the acceptability) of the accounting
principles,  the  reasonableness  of  significant  judgments  and the clarity of
disclosures in the financial statements.

     The Audit Committee also reviewed with the Company's  independent auditors,
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP, their judgments as to the quality (rather than just
the acceptability) of the Company's accounting principles and such other matters
as are  required to be discussed  with the Audit  Committee  under  Statement on
Auditing Standards No. 61, Communication with Audit Committees. In addition, the
Audit Committee discussed with PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, its independence from
management and the Company, including the written disclosures,  letter and other
matters required of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP by Independence Standards Board
Standard  No. 1,  Independence  Discussions  with  Audit  Committees.  The Audit
Committee  also  considered  whether the  provision  of services  during 2002 by
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP that were  unrelated  to its audit of the  financial
statements  referred  to above and to their  reviews  of the  Company's  interim
financial    statements    during   2002   is   compatible   with    maintaining
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP's independence.

     Additionally, the Audit Committee discussed with the Company's internal and
independent auditors the overall scope and plan for their respective audits. The
Audit Committee met with the internal and independent auditors, with and without
management  present,  to  discuss  the  results  of  their  examinations,  their
evaluations of the Company's  internal  controls and the overall  quality of the
Company's financial reporting.

     In reliance on the reviews  and  discussions  referred to above,  the Audit
Committee  recommended  to the Board of  Directors  that the  audited  financial
statements be included in the Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year
ended December 31, 2002 for filing with the Securities and Exchange  Commission.
The Audit  Committee  also  recommended  to the Board  that the  Company  retain
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP as the Company's  independent auditors for 2003. The
Board has approved and ratified such recommendation.

         Audit Committee:

         Christopher E. Fogal, Chairman
         John H. Crane, Member
         Evans Crary, Jr., Member
         T. Michael Crook, Member


March 18, 2003




     The table below sets forth certain  elements of compensation  for the Named
Executive Officers of Seacoast or the Bank for the periods indicated.

                           Summary Compensation Table




                                                      Annual Compensation         Securities            All
                                                      --------------------
                                                                                  Underlying           Other
                                         Year          Salary      Bonus         Options/SARs      Compensation
Name and Principal Position(a)            (b)        ($) (c)    ($) (1) (d)         (#)(g)            ($) (i)
------------------------------           ----        --------   -----------      ------------      ------------
                                                                                     

Dennis S. Hudson, III                    2002        $402,266    $ 125,000            --            $46,919  (2)
President & Chief Executive Officer      2001         361,150      125,000            --             44,366
of Seacoast, Chairman and Chief          2000         329,117       65,000            --             34,908
Executive Officer of the Bank


Dale M. Hudson                           2002        $233,409      --                 --            $27,420  (3)
Chairman of Seacoast                     2001         239,693      --                 --             33,203
                                         2000         221,640      --                 --             29,786

A. Douglas Gilbert                       2002        $398,793     $180,000            --            $50,462  (4)
Senior Executive Vice President &        2001         354,538      175,000            --             46,748
Chief Operating & Credit Officer of      2000         317,653       70,000            --             36,237
Seacoast, President & Chief
Operating & Credit Officer of the
Bank


C. William Curtis, Jr.                   2002        $249,163     $100,000            --            $30,896  (5)
Senior Executive Vice President &        2001         229,097       80,000            --             31,750
Chief Banking Officer of Seacoast        2000         212,775       45,000            --             27,610
and the Bank


William R. Hahl                          2002        $209,663      $55,000            --            $23,688  (6)
Executive Vice President & Chief         2001         196,697       50,000            --             25,358
Financial Officer of Seacoast and        2000         189,203       20,000            --             22,368
the Bank



--------------------------------------


(1)  Incentive cash compensation paid for results achieved during the applicable
     fiscal year in accordance  with the Key Manager  Incentive  Plan as well as
     certain other bonuses related to performance or deemed necessary to attract
     new management. See "Salary and Benefits Committee Report."

(2)  This includes $900 in excess life insurance  benefits,  $11,149 in employer
     matching  contributions  to the  Profit  Sharing  Plan,  $6,540  in  profit
     sharing, $3,400 in employer discretionary retirement contributions, $24,380
     in employer matching  contributions to the Executive Deferred  Compensation
     Plan (the "Compensation  Deferral Plan") and $550 paid by the employer into
     the Cafeteria Plan.

(3)  This includes $4,953 in excess life insurance benefits, $10,657 in employer
     matching  contributions  to the  Profit  Sharing  Plan,  $6,540  in  profit
     sharing, $3,400 in employer discretionary retirement contributions,  $1,320
     in employer  matching  contributions to the Compensation  Deferral Plan and
     $550 paid by the employer into the Cafeteria Plan.

(4)  This includes $3,960 in excess life insurance benefits, $12,372 in employer
     matching  contributions  to the  Profit  Sharing  Plan,  $6,540  in  profit
     sharing, $3,400 in employer discretionary retirement contributions, $23,640
     in employer  matching  contributions to the Compensation  Deferral Plan and
     $550 paid by the employer into the Cafeteria Plan.

(5)  This includes $3,960 in excess life insurance benefits, $10,680 in employer
     matching  contributions  to the  Profit  Sharing  Plan,  $6,540  in  profit
     sharing, $3,400 in employer discretionary retirement contributions,  $5,766
     in employer  matching  contributions to the Compensation  Deferral Plan and
     $550 paid by the employer into the Cafeteria Plan.

(6)  This includes $1,380 in excess life insurance benefits, $10,690 in employer
     matching  contributions  to the  Profit  Sharing  Plan,  $6,540  in  profit
     sharing, $3,400 in employer discretionary retirement contributions,  $1,128
     in employer  matching  contributions to the Compensation  Deferral Plan and
     $550 paid by the employer into the Cafeteria Plan.


                         Grants of Options/SARs in 2002

     No stock  options or stock  appreciation  rights  ("SARs")  were granted in
2002.


                     Aggregated Option/SAR Exercises in 2002
                       and 2002 Year-End Option/SAR Values

     The following  table shows stock options  exercised by the Named  Executive
Officers  during 2002,  including  the  aggregate  value of gains on the date of
exercise.  In  addition,  this  table  includes  the  number of shares of Common
Stock(1) covered by both exercisable and non-exercisable  options as of December
31,  2002.  Also  reported  are the values  for  "in-the-money"  options,  which
represent the positive  spread  between the exercise  price of any such existing
options and the  year-end  price of the  Company's  Common  Stock.  No SARs were
outstanding in 2002.





                                                                     Number of              Value of Unexercised
                                                                    Unexercised          In-the-Money Options/SARs
                                                                  Options/SARs at                    at
                                 Shares (1)                    December 31, 2002(#)       December 31, 2002($)

                                  Acquired        Value           Exercisable(E)/             Exercisable(E)/
Name                             on Exercise     Realized        Unexercisable (U)           Unexercisable (U)
----                             -----------     --------        -----------------           -----------------
                                                                                 

Dennis S. Hudson, III              14,100        $153,455              174,000  (E)           $1,917,160  (E)
                                                                            --  (U)                   --  (U)

Dale M. Hudson                       --             --                      --  (E)                   --  (E)
                                                                            --  (U)                   --  (U)

A. Douglas Gilbert                   --             --                 110,064  (E)           $1,106,392  (E)
                                                                            --  (U)                   --  (U)

C. William Curtis, Jr.               --             --                 101,478  (E)             $994,130  (E)
                                                                            --  (U)                   --  (U)

William R. Hahl                     2,700        $22,950                65,214  (E)             $711,454  (E)
                                                                            --  (U)                   --  (U)


-------------------------------


(1)  Shares  were  acquired  prior to the  Company's  three-for-one  stock split
     effective,  July 1, 2002, and have been adjusted to reflect the split.  All
     exercised  and  outstanding  shares  are  shares of Common  Stock,  and all
     options  and SARs  relate to Common  Stock.  There are no  options  or SARs
     involving Preferred Stock.



                               Profit Sharing Plan

     Seacoast  sponsors a  Retirement  Savings  Plan for  Employees of the First
National Bank & Trust Company of the Treasure Coast (the "Profit Sharing Plan").
The Profit  Sharing  Plan has  various  features,  including  employer  matching
contribution for salary deferrals of up to 4% of the employee's compensation for
each calendar  quarter.  The Company matches 100% of any Elective Profit Sharing
Contribution  that is deferred into the Profit  Sharing  Plan. In addition,  the
Profit Sharing Plan has a Code Section  401(k) feature that allows  employees to
make  voluntary  "salary  savings  contributions"  ranging  from  1% to  18%  of
compensation   (as  defined  by  the  Plan),   subject  to  federal  income  tax
limitations.  After-tax  contributions  may  also  be  made  by  employees  with
"voluntary contributions" of up to 10% of compensation (as defined in the Profit
Sharing Plan for each plan year), subject to certain statutory limitations.

     A retirement  contribution is made on an annual  discretionary basis by the
Company of up to 2% of  "retirement  eligible  compensation,"  as defined in the
Profit  Sharing  Plan.  At the end of each plan  year,  the  Company's  Board of
Directors  decides  whether to make a profit sharing  contribution  for the plan
year. If it decides to make such a contribution,  the  contribution is allocated
among eligible  employees based on each employee's  "eligible  compensation"  as
defined in the  Profit  Sharing  Plan.  At least 50% of this  contribution  (the
"Non-Elective  Profit  Sharing  Contribution")  is contributed to the employee's
Profit Sharing account. The balance (the "Elective Profit Sharing Contribution")
may be deferred  into the Profit  Sharing Plan or taken in cash by the employee,
at the employee's election.


                      Executive Deferred Compensation Plan

     The Bank offers an Executive Deferred  Compensation Plan (the "Compensation
Deferral  Plan")  designed  to  permit a select  group of  management  or highly
compensated employees, including the Named Executive Officers, to elect to defer
a portion of their  compensation  until their termination of employment with the
Company and to receive matching and other Company  contributions  which they are
restricted  from  receiving  under the Company's  Profit Sharing Plan because of
legal limitations.







                                Performance Graph

     The  following   line-graph  compares  the  cumulative,   total  return  on
Seacoast's  Common Stock from December 31, 1998 to December 31, 2002,  with that
of the Russell  2000 Index (an average of the 2,000  smallest  companies  in the
Russell 3000 Index) and the Russell 2000 Financial Services Index (an average of
all financial service companies included in the Russell 2000 Index).  Cumulative
total  return  represents  the change in stock price and the amount of dividends
received over the indicated period, assuming the reinvestment of dividends.


[GRAPH OMITTED]


                       Employment and Severance Agreements

     The Bank  entered into an executive  employment  agreement  with A. Douglas
Gilbert on March 22, 1991.  Similar  agreements were entered into with Dennis S.
Hudson,  III on January 18, 1994,  and with C. William  Curtis,  Jr. on July 31,
1995.  Each such  agreement  has a three-year  term and  provides for  automatic
renewal  on an  annual  basis  at the end of that  term;  provided  neither  the
employee nor the Bank gives written notice  electing not to renew such agreement
not less than 90 days prior to the end of the  agreement's  then  current  term.
Each  such  agreement  contains  certain  non-competition,   non-disclosure  and
non-solicitation covenants.

     These   employment   agreements   also   provide   for   a   base   salary,
hospitalization,   insurance,   long  term  disability  and  life  insurance  in
accordance with the Bank's insurance plans for senior management, and reasonable
club dues.  Each  executive  subject to these  contracts  may also receive other
compensation   including  bonuses,  and  the  executives  will  be  entitled  to
participate in all current and future employee benefit plans and arrangements in
which senior management of the Bank may participate.  The agreements provide for
termination of the employee for cause,  including  willful and continued failure
to perform the assigned duties, crimes, breach of the Bank's Code of Ethics, and
also  upon  death or  permanent  disability  of the  executive.  Each  agreement
contains a Change in Control  provision  which  provides  that  certain  events,
including the acquisition of the Bank or the Company in a merger,  consolidation
or similar  transaction,  the  acquisition of 51% or more of the voting power of
any one or all classes of Common Stock, the sale of all or substantially  all of
the assets,  and certain other  changes in share  ownership,  will  constitute a
"change in control"  which would allow the  executive to terminate  the contract
within one year  following the date of such change in control.  Termination  may
also be  permitted  by the  executive  in the event of a change  in  duties  and
powers, customarily associated with the office designated in such contract. Upon
any such termination following a change in control, the executive's base salary,
hospitalization and other health benefits will continue for two years.


                    SALARY AND BENEFITS COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS
                            AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION


     Messrs. Crary (Chairman),  Bohner, Bruner, Furst, Dennis S. Hudson, Jr. and
Santarsiero are the members of the Salary and Benefits  Committee,  none of whom
is an officer or employee of Seacoast or its subsidiaries.  Mr. Hudson served as
Chairman of the Board of Seacoast  from 1990 until June 1998; he served as Chief
Executive  Officer of Seacoast  from 1983 until 1992 and  President  of Seacoast
from 1983 until 1990. See "Proposal 1 - Election of Directors."

     Jeffrey C. Bruner,  a director of Seacoast and the Bank,  is a  controlling
shareholder of Mayfair Investments,  which leases to the Bank 21,400 square feet
of space adjacent to the First National Center in Stuart,  Florida pursuant to a
lease  agreement  which expires in May 2007.  At the end of the lease term,  the
Bank has an option to extend the lease for a period of five years. The Bank paid
rent of $262,700 on this property in 2002.  Seacoast  believes the terms of this
lease are  commercially  reasonable and comparable to rental terms negotiated at
arm's length between unrelated parties for similar property in Stuart.

     Evans Crary,  Jr., a director of Seacoast and the Bank, and Chairman of the
Bank's Executive Committee and the Company's Salary and Benefits Committee, is a
retired  member of Crary,  Buchanan,  Bowdish,  Bovie,  Beres,  Negron & Thomas,
Chartered  ("Crary-Buchanan"),  a law firm in  Stuart,  Florida.  Crary-Buchanan
performed  various  legal  services  for Seacoast and the Bank during the fiscal
year ended December 31, 2002.

     Messrs.  Bruner and Dennis S. Hudson,  Jr. have  resigned as members of the
Salary and Benefits Committee,  effective  immediately following the Meeting, to
increase the Committee's independence.



                 CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS AND BUSINESS RELATIONSHIPS


     Several of Seacoast's  directors,  executive officers and their affiliates,
including  corporations  and firms of which they are directors or officers or in
which they and/or their  families have an ownership  interest,  are customers of
Seacoast and its  subsidiaries.  These persons,  corporations and firms have had
transactions   in  the  ordinary  course  of  business  with  Seacoast  and  its
subsidiaries,  including  borrowings,  all of which,  in the opinion of Seacoast
management,  were on substantially the same terms,  including interest rates and
collateral,  as those  prevailing at the time for comparable  transactions  with
unaffiliated  persons  and  did  not  involve  more  than  the  normal  risk  of
collectibility  or  present  other  unfavorable   features.   Seacoast  and  its
subsidiaries  expect to have such  transactions  on  similar  terms  with  their
directors, executive officers, and their affiliates in the future. The aggregate
amount of loans outstanding by the Bank to directors,  executive  officers,  and
related  parties  of  Seacoast  or  the  Bank  as  of  December  31,  2002,  was
approximately  $4,010,127,  which represented  approximately 3.98% of Seacoast's
consolidated shareholders' equity on that date.


     For information concerning specific transactions and business relationships
between Seacoast or the Bank and certain of its directors or executive officers,
see "Salary and  Benefits  Committee  Interlocks  and Insider  Participation  in
Compensation Decisions."







                             PRINCIPAL SHAREHOLDERS

     As of February 28, 2003, the only shareholders  known to Seacoast to be the
beneficial  owners,  as defined by Securities and Exchange  Commission rules, of
more than 5% of the outstanding  shares of Common Stock were the following,  for
whom beneficial ownership information is set forth in the following table.


                                            Number and Percent of Common Stock
                                                   Beneficially Owned
                                            ----------------------------------

Name and Address of Beneficial Owner           Number                  %

Dale M. Hudson (1) (2)                        1,504,255              10.78
     192 S.E. Harbor Point Drive
     Stuart, FL  34996

Dennis S. Hudson, Jr. (1) (3)                 1,223,361               8.77
     157 S. River Road
     Stuart, FL  34996

Dennis S. Hudson, III (1) (3)                 1,245,960               8.93
     2341 NW Bay Colony Court
     Stuart, FL  34994

Mary T. Hudson (1) (2)                        1,504,255 (4)          10.78
     192 S.E. Harbor Point Drive
     Stuart, FL  34996

Anne P. Hudson (1) (3)                        1,223,361 (5)           8.77
     157 S. River Road
     Stuart, FL  34996


(1)  Dennis S. Hudson,  Jr. and Dale M. Hudson are  brothers.  Anne P. Hudson is
     the wife of Dennis S.  Hudson,  Jr.  Mary T.  Hudson is the wife of Dale M.
     Hudson.  Dennis S. Hudson,  III is the son of Dennis S. Hudson, Jr. and the
     nephew of Dale M. Hudson.  See the table under  "Proposal One - Election of
     Directors" for further information on their beneficial ownership.

(2)  Dale M. Hudson and his wife,  Mary T. Hudson,  are the general  partners of
     Monroe Partners, their family limited partnership, which as of February 28,
     2003 owned 1,323,747 shares of Company Common Stock. Each of Dale M. Hudson
     and Mary T. Hudson, as general partners,  may be deemed to share voting and
     investment  power with the other general partner and each of them disclaims
     beneficial  ownership  with respect to such shares  except to the extent of
     their  respective  partnership  interests.  See "Proposal One - Election of
     Directors" for further information regarding their beneficial ownership.

(3)  Dennis S. Hudson,  Jr. and his wife,  Anne P. Hudson,  together  with their
     son, Dennis S. Hudson,  III, are the general partners of Sherwood Partners,
     their  family  limited  partnership,  which as of  February  28, 2003 owned
     1,019,799 shares of Company Common Stock.  Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Hudson,  Jr.
     are also limited partners of Sherwood Partners and have transferred certain
     of their limited partnership interests into trusts for the benefit of their
     family members and plan to make additional  transfers from time to time. As
     of this  date,  none of the trust  beneficiaries,  other  than Mr. and Mrs.
     Dennis Hudson,  Jr., has present interests in the trusts. Each of Dennis S.
     Hudson, Jr., Anne P. Hudson and Dennis S. Hudson, III, as general partners,
     may be deemed to share voting and  investment  power with the other general
     partners and each of them  disclaims  beneficial  ownership with respect to
     such shares except to the extent described in the table under "Proposal One
     - Election of Directors",  which  contains  further  information  regarding
     their beneficial ownership.

(4)  Includes  180,508  shares held jointly with Mrs.  Hudson's  husband,  as to
     which  shares  Mrs.  Hudson may be deemed to share  voting  and  investment
     power.

(5)  Includes 61,311 shares held by Mrs.  Hudson's  husband,  as to which shares
     Mrs.  Hudson may be deemed to share voting and  investment  power and as to
     which Mrs. Hudson disclaims beneficial ownership.




THE FOLLOWING PROPOSAL TO AMEND THE ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION IS A SUMMARY ONLY,
AND IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY THE PROPOSED  AMENDED AND RESTATED  ARTICLES
OF INCORPORATION INCLUDED IN APPENDIX A HERETO.



                                   PROPOSAL 2

                AMENDMENTS TO THE BUSINESS COMBINATION PROVISIONS



     Article VII of the Company's Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation
presently requires that, for any merger,  consolidation,  share exchange,  sale,
lease,  exchange or other transfer of all or substantially  all of the assets of
the Company or any significant  subsidiary or any  transaction  having a similar
effect to be approved, the Company must receive (i) the approval of its Board of
Directors,  and (ii)  the  approval  of a  66-2/3%  supermajority  of all of its
outstanding  shares of Common Stock.  These votes are required  whether or not a
shareholder vote is otherwise  required by law or by the rules of any securities
exchange or market where the Company's shares are listed or traded, except where
the Company is issuing shares to make an acquisition of another company,  person
or entity.

     This  Proposal 2 would  amend the voting  requirements  of Article  VII. In
addition,  the Company  believes that this  amendments  would clarify the intent
that, upon the approval of (i) 66-2/3% of the Whole Board of Directors, and (ii)
a majority of the  Continuing  Directors,  the vote of only a majority of Voting
Shares would be needed to approve such business combination.  Accordingly, where
the Board  believes  a  business  combination  is in the best  interests  of the
Company and its  shareholders,  the effective vote required for approval of such
business  combination  is being  reduced  from  66-2/3% to a majority  of Voting
Shares.  The Board of Directors  believes that it is  appropriate  to make these
changes  in  order to give the  Company  greater  flexibility  with  respect  to
business  combinations  that  are  endorsed   overwhelmingly  by  the  Board  of
Directors,  including the Continuing Directors.  Capitalized terms that are used
but not  defined  in this  paragraph  are  defined  elsewhere  in the  following
paragraphs and more fully in the proposed Articles, which are attached hereto as
Appendix A, and which incorporate the amendment proposed by this Proposal 2.

     The proposed business combination  amendments to the Company's Articles set
forth certain procedures relating to a "Business  Combination," which is broadly
defined in the Articles to include, among other things, mergers, consolidations,
sales of assets  and  similar  transactions  between  the  Company or any of its
Subsidiaries  and any other  persons,  entities or groups,  or the  acquisition,
directly or indirectly, of 5% or more of the Voting Shares of the Company or the
voting  securities of any Subsidiary by other persons,  entities or groups after
February 28, 2003, or the acquisition,  directly or indirectly, of 5% or more of
the Voting Shares of the Company or the voting  securities of any  Subsidiary by
persons,  entities or groups that  beneficially  own 5% or more of the Company's
Voting  Shares  (such  persons,  entities,  and groups are  defined as  "Related
Persons").   The  proposed   amendment   would  require   approval  of  Business
Combinations by the affirmative  vote of 66-2/3% of all of the Voting Shares and
an Independent  Majority of  Shareholders,  unless such Business  Combination is
approved  by  66-2/3% of the Whole  Board of  Directors  and a  majority  of the
Continuing Directors, in which event approval requires only a majority of Voting
Shares.  See  Article VII of the  attached  Articles -  "Provisions  Relating to
Business Combinations".

     The proposed amendments to the Company's Articles may be briefly summarized
as follows:

     Approval of Business Combinations. Whether or not a vote of shareholders is
otherwise  required,  and in addition to any votes otherwise required by law, by
agreement or resolution,  or otherwise,  this proposed amendment to the Articles
requires  an  affirmative  vote of 66-2/3% of the  outstanding  "Voting  Shares"
(i.e.,  those shares  entitled to vote  generally  in  elections of  directors),
voting  separately as a class, and by an "Independent  Majority of Shareholders"
(i.e., a majority of the  outstanding  Voting Shares not  beneficially  owned or
controlled  by a Related  Person)  before the  Company  can enter  into  certain
"Business Combinations."

     These provisions would not apply to a Business Combination that is approved
by (a) 66-2/3% of the  Company's  "Whole Board of  Directors"  (i.e.,  the total
number of  directors  if there were no  vacancies),  and (b) a  majority  of the
"Continuing Directors." A "Continuing Director" is a director who either (i) was
first  elected  as a Director  of the  Company  prior to any  person  becoming a
Related  Person,  or (ii) was  designated  prior to his  initial  election  as a
"Continuing  Director" by a majority of the then Continuing  Directors.  In such
event, the required shareholder vote (the "Minimum Vote") shall be a majority of
the Company's  outstanding Voting Shares. All directors  nominated by your Board
of Directors for election at the Meeting will be Continuing Directors.

     The Board has  determined  that it  continues  to be  desirable  to include
provisions in the Articles to encourage  persons  seeking control of the Company
to consult  with the Board,  and to enable the Board to  negotiate  and give due
consideration   on  behalf  of  the  Company  and  its  shareholders  and  other
constituencies  as to the  merits of any offer  that may be made.  The  proposed
Business Combination  amendments will further this goal. The Articles also grant
the Company and its Board of  Directors  the maximum  flexibility  to respond to
initiatives from others and to pursue acquisition  opportunities for the Company
using authorized but unissued shares. The Board has determined that it is in the
best  interests of the  organization  that it protect its  shareholders  and the
Company  from  unsolicited,  hostile  takeover  attempts,  which are  costly and
detract  from the  Company's  efforts to serve its  communities  pursuant to its
successful, long-term plan, and to thereby best serve Company shareholders.

     Takeovers  or changes in  management  of the Company  that are proposed and
effected   without  prior   consultation  and  negotiation  with  the  Company's
management are not necessarily  detrimental to the Company and its shareholders.
However,  the Company's  Board  believes that the benefits of seeking to protect
the Board of Directors' ability to negotiate with the proponent of an unfriendly
or  unsolicited  proposal to acquire or  restructure  the Company  outweigh  the
possible disadvantages of discouraging such proposals.

     The ratification,  approval and implementation of the Business  Combination
provisions  in the  Company's  Articles may make more  difficult  or  discourage
attempts to take  control of the Company by a holder of a  substantial  block of
the Company's  capital stock  without the prior  negotiation  with the Company's
Board and, therefore, could have the effect of maintaining incumbent management.

     This Proposal 2 requires approval by the affirmative vote of 66-2/3% of the
outstanding shares of Common Stock entitled to vote at the Meeting.

     The Board of Directors unanimously recommends a vote "FOR" Proposal 2.



                                   PROPOSAL 3

                        ADJOURNMENT OF THE ANNUAL MEETING

     Proposal 3 would give the proxy holders discretionary  authority to vote to
adjourn the Meeting for up to 120 days if there are not sufficient  shares voted
at the Meeting, in person or by proxy, to approve Proposal 2.

     If the Company desires to adjourn the Meeting, the presiding officer at the
Meeting will  request a motion that the Meeting be adjourned  for up to 120 days
with respect to Proposal 2 (and solely with respect to Proposal 2, provided that
a quorum is present at the Meeting),  and no vote will be taken on Proposal 2 at
the  originally  scheduled  Meeting.  Unless revoked prior to its use, any proxy
solicited for the Meeting will  continue to be valid for any adjourned  meeting,
and will be voted in accordance with instructions  contained therein,  and if no
contrary instructions are given, for Proposal 2.

     Approval of this proposal will allow the Company, to the extent that shares
voted by proxy are  required to approve a proposal to adjourn  the  Meeting,  to
solicit  additional proxies to determine whether sufficient shares will be voted
in favor of or against  Proposal  2. If the  Company  is unable to  adjourn  the
Meeting  to  solicit  additional  proxies,  Proposal  2 may  fail,  not  because
shareholders  voted  against the  proposal,  but rather  because  there were not
sufficient shares  represented at the Meeting to approve Proposal 2. The Company
has no reason to believe that an adjournment of the Meeting will be necessary at
this time.

     This Proposal  requires  approval by the affirmative vote of a plurality of
votes cast at the Meeting.

     The Board of Directors unanimously recommends a vote "FOR" Proposal 3.







                              INDEPENDENT AUDITORS


     The Board of Directors, upon the recommendation of the Audit Committee, has
appointed  PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, independent certified public accountants,
as independent auditors for Seacoast and its subsidiaries for the current fiscal
year ending December 31, 2003. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP became the independent
auditors for Seacoast and its subsidiaries in June 2002, following the dismissal
of Arthur  Andersen  LLP.  The  decision  to replace  Arthur  Andersen  LLP with
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP was made by Seacoast's Board of Directors,  upon the
recommendation  of the Audit Committee,  and was not based upon any disagreement
on any  matter  of  accounting  principles  or  practices,  financial  statement
disclosure, or auditing scope or procedure.  PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP's report
on Seacoast's  financial  statements for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2002
did not  contain an adverse  opinion or a  disclaimer  of  opinion,  and was not
qualified or modified as to uncertainty,  audit scope, or accounting principles.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP has advised Seacoast that neither the firm nor any of
its  partners  has  any  direct  or  material   interest  in  Seacoast  and  its
subsidiaries except as auditors and independent  certified public accountants of
Seacoast and its subsidiaries.


     During the Company's 2002 fiscal year, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP consulted
with  Seacoast on various  matters and  provided  professional  services for the
Company for fees and expenses as follows:

                  Audit and Review Fees
                  Financial Information Systems Design and Implementation
                  All Other Fees:
                       Audit-related Fees (1)
                       Other Non-audit Fees (2)     ____________
                  Total All Other Fees              ____________

                  TOTAL                             ____________
                  --------------------


          (1)  Audit-related fees consisted of fees paid for audits to financial
               statements of the Company's  Profit Sharing Plan and a subsidiary
               of the Bank, as well as reviews of the Company's internal control
               structure  over  financial  reporting  and Federal Home Loan Bank
               borrowings.

          (2)  Other non-audit fees consisted of fees paid for evaluation of the
               Company's computer network environment.


     A  representative  of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP will be  present  at the
Meeting and will be given the  opportunity  to make a statement on behalf of the
firm,  if he so desires,  and will also be available  to respond to  appropriate
questions from shareholders.



             SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE


     Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 requires the Company's
directors  and  executive  officers,  and  persons  who own more than 10% of the
Company's  Common Stock,  to file with the SEC initial  reports of ownership and
reports of changes in ownership of Common Stock and other equity  securities  of
the Company.  Directors,  executive officers and persons owning more than 10% of
the  Company's  Common  Stock are required to furnish the Company with copies of
all Section  16(a)  reports  they file.  Based on the  Company's  review of such
reports and written  representations  from the  reporting  persons,  the Company
believes that,  during and with respect to fiscal 2002, all filing  requirements
applicable to its directors,  executive  officers and beneficial  owners of more
than 10% of its Common Stock were complied with in a timely manner,  except that
Mr.  Gilbert  inadvertently  neglected  to report his  acquisition  of  indirect
beneficial  ownership of 600 shares of Common Stock during fiscal year 1997. The
Company  believes that Mr.  Gilbert's Form 5 filed on February 10, 2003 reflects
his current holdings.


                  SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR 2004 ANNUAL MEETING

     To be considered for inclusion in the Company's  Proxy  Statement and Proxy
for the 2004 Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders,  a  shareholder  proposal must be
received at the Company's principal executive offices no later than November 19,
2003, which is 120 calendar days before the one-year anniversary of the date the
Company mailed this Proxy Statement to  shareholders.  Any shareholder  proposal
not received at the Company's principal executive offices no later than February
2, 2004,  which is 45 calendar days before the one-year  anniversary of the date
the Company  mailed this Proxy  Statement to  shareholders,  will be  considered
untimely and, if presented at the 2004 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, the proxy
holders will be able to exercise discretionary  authority to vote your shares on
any such proposal to the extent authorized by Rule 14a-4(c) under the Securities
Exchange Act.



                                  OTHER MATTERS

     Management  of Seacoast  does not know of any matters to be brought  before
the Meeting other than those described above. If any other matters properly come
before the Meeting,  the persons designated as Proxies will vote on such matters
in accordance with their best judgment.


                                OTHER INFORMATION

Proxy Solicitation Costs

     The cost of  soliciting  Proxies for the Meeting  will be paid by Seacoast,
which  may  also  pay the  reasonable  costs  of  retaining  one or  more  proxy
solicitation  firms.  Seacoast  has  retained  Morrow & Company,  Inc.,  a proxy
solicitation firm, to solicit Proxies for the Meeting. The fees of such firm are
not expected to exceed approximately  $12,500, plus expenses. In addition to the
solicitation  of  shareholders of record by mail,  telephone,  electronic  mail,
facsimile or personal  contact,  Seacoast will be contacting  brokers,  dealers,
banks,  or voting  trustees or their  nominees who can be  identified  as record
holders of Common Stock; such holders,  after inquiry by Seacoast,  will provide
information  concerning quantities of proxy materials and 2002 Annual Reports to
Shareholders  needed  to supply  such  information  to  beneficial  owners,  and
Seacoast  will  reimburse  them for the  reasonable  expense  of  mailing  proxy
materials and 2002 Annual Reports to such persons.


Annual Report on Form 10-K

     Upon the written  request of any person  whose Proxy is  solicited  by this
Proxy Statement, Seacoast will furnish to such person without charge (other than
for  exhibits) a copy of  Seacoast's  Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal
year ended  December 31, 2002,  including  financial  statements  and  schedules
thereto, as filed with the Securities and Exchange  Commission.  Requests may be
made to Seacoast Banking Corporation of Florida, P.O. Box 9012, Stuart,  Florida
34995, Attention: Dennis S. Hudson III, President & Chief Executive Officer.

                                           By Order of the Board of Directors,

                                           [GRAPHIC OMITTED][GRAPHIC OMITTED]

                                           DENNIS S. HUDSON III
                                           President & Chief Executive Officer

March 18, 2003






                              AMENDED AND RESTATED

                            ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
                                       OF
                     SEACOAST BANKING CORPORATION OF FLORIDA


                                    ARTICLE I
                                      NAME

     The name of the  corporation  (the  "Corporation")  is:  "Seacoast  Banking
Corporation of Florida".


                                   ARTICLE II
                                TERM OF EXISTENCE

     The Corporation shall have perpetual duration and existence.


                                   ARTICLE III
                               OBJECTS AND POWERS

     The nature of the  Corporation's  business,  and its objects,  purposes and
powers are as follows:

     3.01 Holding Company  Activities.  To purchase or otherwise acquire, to own
and to hold the stock of banks and other  corporations,  and to do every act and
thing  covered  generally  by the  denominations  "holding  corporation",  "bank
holding company",  and "financial holding company", and especially to direct the
operations of other entities  through the ownership of stock or other  interests
therein.

     3.02  Investments,  etc. To purchase,  subscribe for,  acquire,  own, hold,
sell, exchange,  assign, transfer,  mortgage,  pledge,  hypothecate or otherwise
transfer or dispose of stock,  scrip,  warrants,  rights,  bonds,  securities or
evidences  of  indebtedness  created by any other  corporation  or  corporations
organized under the laws of any state, or any bonds or evidences of indebtedness
of the United States or any state, district, territory,  dependency or county or
subdivision or municipality  thereof,  and to issue and exchange  therefor cash,
capital stock,  bonds,  notes or other securities,  evidences of indebtedness or
obligations  of the  Corporation  and while the owner  thereof to  exercise  all
rights,  powers and privileges of ownership,  including the right to vote on any
shares of stock, voting trust certificates or other instruments so owned.

     3.03 Other Business.  To transact any business, to engage in any lawful act
or activity and to exercise all powers  permitted to corporations by the Florida
Business Corporation Act (the "FBCA").

     The enumeration herein of the objects and purposes of the Corporation shall
not be deemed to exclude or in any way limit by inference any powers, objects or
purposes that the Corporation is empowered to exercise,  whether  expressly,  by
purpose  or by  any of the  laws  of the  State  of  Florida  or any  reasonable
construction of such laws.


                                   ARTICLE IV
                                  CAPITAL STOCK

     4.01  General.  The total number of shares of all classes of capital  stock
("Shares") which the Corporation shall have the authority to issue is 26,000,000
consisting of the following classes:

          (1)  22,000,000  Shares  of  common  stock,  $.10 par  value per share
     ("Common Stock"); and ------------

          (2)  4,000,000  Shares of  preferred  stock,  $.10 par value per share
     ("Preferred Stock"). ---------------

     4.02  Preferred  Stock.  Shares of  Preferred  Stock may be issued  for any
purpose and in any manner permitted by law, in one or more distinctly designated
series, as a dividend or for such  consideration as the  Corporation's  Board of
Directors may determine by resolution or resolutions from time to time adopted.

     The Board of Directors is expressly  authorized  to fix and  determine,  by
resolution or resolutions from time to time adopted prior to the issuance of any
Shares of a  particular  series of Preferred  Stock,  the  designations,  voting
powers (if any),  preferences,  and relative,  participating,  optional or other
special  rights,  and  qualifications,   limitations  or  restrictions  thereof,
including, but without limiting the generality of the foregoing, the following:

               (1) The distinctive designation and number of Shares of Preferred
          Stock that shall  constitute  a series,  which number may from time to
          time be increased or decreased  (but not below the number of Shares of
          such  series  then  outstanding),  by  like  action  of the  Board  of
          Directors;

               (2) The rate or rates and times at which dividends, if any, shall
          be paid on each series of  Preferred  Stock,  whether  such  dividends
          shall be cumulative or  non-cumulative,  the extent of the preference,
          subordination or other  relationship to dividends declared or paid, or
          any other  amounts  paid or  distributed  upon,  or in respect of, any
          other class or series of Preferred Stock or other Shares;

               (3)  Redemption  provisions,  if any,  including  whether  or not
          Shares of any  series may be  redeemed  by the  Corporation  or by the
          holders  of such  series of  Preferred  Stock,  or by  either,  and if
          redeemable,  the redemption price or prices, redemption rate or rates,
          and such adjustments to such redemption  price(s) or rate(s) as may be
          determined,  the manner and time or times at which,  and the terms and
          conditions upon which, Shares of such series may be redeemed;

               (4) Conversion,  exchange,  purchase or other privileges, if any,
          to acquire Shares or other securities of any class or series,  whether
          at the option of the  Corporation or of the holder,  and if subject to
          conversion,  exchange, purchase or similar privileges, the conversion,
          exchange or purchase prices or rates and such  adjustments  thereto as
          may be  determined,  the  manner  and  time or  times  at  which  such
          privileges  may be  exercised,  and the terms and  conditions  of such
          conversion, exchange, purchase or other privileges;

               (5) The  rights,  including  the amount or  amounts,  if any,  of
          preferential  or other payments or  distributions  to which holders of
          Shares of any series are entitled  upon the  dissolution,  winding-up,
          voluntary or involuntary liquidation,  distribution,  or sale or lease
          of all or substantially all of the assets of the Corporation; and

               (6) The terms of the  sinking  fund,  retirement,  redemption  or
          purchase  account,  if any,  to be  provided  for such  series and the
          priority,  if any, to which any funds or payments  allocated  therefor
          shall  have over the  payment  of  dividends,  or over  sinking  fund,
          retirement,  redemption,  purchase  account or other  payments  on, or
          distributions in respect of, other series of Preferred Stock or Shares
          of other classes.

     All Shares of the same series of Preferred  Stock shall be identical in all
respects,  except there may be  different  dates from which  dividends,  if any,
thereon may cumulate, if made cumulative.

     4.03  Dividends.  Dividends  upon all classes and series of Shares shall be
payable  only when,  as and if  declared  by the Board of  Directors  from funds
lawfully available therefor, which funds shall include, without limitation,  the
Corporation's capital surplus. Dividends upon any class or series of Corporation
Shares may be paid in cash, property,  or Shares of any class or series or other
securities or evidences of  indebtedness of the Corporation or any other issuer,
as may be determined by resolution or resolutions of the Board of Directors.

     4.04 Rights,  Warrants,  Options,  etc. The Board of Directors is expressly
authorized  to create  and  issue,  by  resolutions  adopted  from time to time,
rights,  warrants or options entitling the holders thereof to purchase Shares of
any kind,  class or series,  whether or not in connection  with the issuance and
sale of any Shares, or other securities or indebtedness.  The Board of Directors
also  is  authorized  expressly  to  determine  the  terms,  including,  without
limitation,  the time or times  within  which  and the  price or prices at which
Shares may be purchased upon the exercise of any such right or option. The Board
of  Directors'   judgment  shall  be  conclusive  as  to  the  adequacy  of  the
consideration received for any such rights or options.

     4.05 No Preemptive  Rights.  No holder of any Shares of any kind,  class or
series shall have, as a matter of right, any preemptive or preferential right to
subscribe  for,  purchase or receive any Shares of any kind,  class or series or
any Corporation securities or obligations, whether now or thereafter authorized.



                                    ARTICLE V
                                REGISTERED AGENT

     The Corporation's  registered  office and initial  registered agent at that
address shall be:

                                            Dennis S. Hudson, III
                                            815 Colorado Avenue
                                            Stuart, Florida  34994



                                   ARTICLE VI
                               BOARD OF DIRECTORS

     6.01 Number.  The business and affairs of the Corporation  shall be managed
by or under the direction of the Board of Directors, each of whose members shall
have the  qualifications,  if any, set forth in the Bylaws,  and who need not be
residents of the State of Florida.  The number of  directors of the  Corporation
(exclusive  of  directors to be elected by the holders of any one or more series
of  Preferred  Stock  voting  separately  as a  class  or  classes)  that  shall
constitute  the Whole  Board of  Directors  shall be between 3 and 14,  with the
exact  number  determined  from  time  to  time  by  resolution  adopted  by the
affirmative  vote of at least (i)  two-thirds  (66  2/3%) of the Whole  Board of
Directors and (ii) a majority of the Continuing Directors. In no event shall the
Whole Board of Directors consist of less than 11 persons.

     6.02  Classification;  Vacancies.  The Board of Directors  shall be divided
into three classes,  designated Classes I, II and III, as nearly equal in number
as the then total number of directors  constituting the Whole Board of Directors
permits,  with the term of office of one class expiring each year. At the annual
meeting  of  shareholders  when the  Board  of  Directors  is first  classified,
directors of Class I shall be elected to hold office for a term  expiring at the
next succeeding  annual meeting,  directors of Class II shall be elected to hold
office for a term expiring at the second succeeding annual meeting and directors
of Class III shall be elected to hold  office for a term  expiring  at the third
succeeding  annual  meeting.  Any  vacancies in the Board of  Directors  for any
reason, and any newly created  directorships  resulting from any increase in the
number of  directors,  may be filled only by the Board of  Directors,  acting by
vote of (i) 66 2/3% of the  directors  then in office and (ii) a majority of the
Continuing Directors,  although less than a quorum, or if no directors remain by
the affirmative  vote of not less than (i) 66 2/3% of the Voting Shares and (ii)
an Independent Majority of Shareholders,  and any directors so chosen shall hold
office until the next  election of the class of the director  they have replaced
and until their  successors have been elected and qualified.  No decrease in the
number  of  directors  shall  shorten  the  term  of  any  incumbent   director.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, and except as otherwise required by law, whenever
the holders of any one or more series of  Preferred  Stock shall have the right,
voting separately as a class, to elect one or more directors of the Corporation,
the terms of the director or directors  elected by such holders  shall expire at
the next succeeding  annual meeting of shareholders  and vacancies  created with
respect to any  directorship  of the directors so elected shall be filled in the
manner specified by such series of Preferred Stock. Subject to the foregoing, at
each annual  meeting of  shareholders,  the successors to the class of directors
whose term is then expiring  shall be elected to hold office for a term expiring
at the third  succeeding  annual  meeting and until their  successors  have been
elected and qualified.

     6.03 Nominations.  In addition to the right of the  Corporation's  Board of
Directors to make nominations for the election of directors, nominations for the
election of directors may be made by any shareholder  entitled to vote generally
in the  election  of  directors  if that  shareholder  complies  with all of the
provisions of this Section 6.03.

               (1) Advance notice of such proposed  nomination shall be received
          by the Secretary of the Corporation (a) with respect to an election of
          directors to be held at an annual  meeting,  not less than 60 days nor
          more than 90 days prior to the  anniversary of the last annual meeting
          of Corporation  shareholders (or, if the date of the annual meeting is
          changed  by more that 20 days from such  anniversary  date,  within 10
          days  after the date that the  Corporation  mails or  otherwise  gives
          notice  of the  date  of such  meeting)  and (b)  with  respect  to an
          election to be held at a special meeting called for that purpose,  not
          later  than the  close of the tenth  day  following  the date on which
          notice of the meeting was first mailed to shareholders.

               (2) Each notice  under  Section  6.03 (1) shall set forth (i) the
          name, age,  business address and, if known,  residence address of each
          nominee  proposed in such notice,  (ii) the  principal  occupation  or
          employment of each such nominee during the past five years,  (iii) the
          number of Shares of the Corporation  which are  Beneficially  Owned by
          each such  nominee;  (iv)  whether  such person or persons are or have
          ever been at any time directors,  officers or beneficial  owners of 5%
          or more of any class of capital stock,  partnership interests or other
          equity  interest of any Person and if so a  description  thereof;  any
          directorships or similar position,  and/or Beneficial  Ownership of 5%
          or more of any class of capital stock,  partnership interests or other
          equity  interest  held by such  person or persons in any Person with a
          class  of  securities   registered  pursuant  to  Section  12  of  the
          Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the  "Exchange  Act") or
          subject to the  requirements  of Section  15(d) of the Exchange Act or
          any company  registered as an investment  company under the Investment
          Company Act of 1940, as amended;  (v) whether, in the last five years,
          such  person or  persons  are or have  been  convicted  in a  criminal
          proceeding  or have been  subject  to a  judgment,  order,  finding or
          decree of any  federal,  state or other  governmental,  regulatory  or
          self-regulatory entity,  concerning any violation of federal, state or
          other law, or any proceeding in  bankruptcy,  in order to evaluate the
          ability or integrity of the nominee;  (vi) the name and address of the
          nominator  and the  number of Shares  of the  Corporation  held by the
          nominator,  and a written  confirmation that the nominator is and will
          remain a shareholder  of the  Corporation  through the meeting;  (vii)
          represent  that the nominator  intends to appear in person or by proxy
          at the meeting to make such nomination,  (viii) full disclosure of the
          existence and terms of all agreements and understandings,  between the
          nominator  or any other  person and the  nominee  with  respect to the
          nominee's  nomination,   or  possible  election  and  service  to  the
          Corporation's Board of Directors,  or a confirmation that there are no
          such arrangements or understandings;  (ix) the written consent of each
          such  person  to serve as a  director  if  elected;  and (x) any other
          information reasonably requested by the Corporation.

               (3) The  nomination  made by a shareholder  may only be made in a
          meeting of the shareholders of the Corporation called for the election
          of  directors  at which  such  shareholder  is present in person or by
          proxy,  and  can  only  be made  by a  shareholder  who has  therefore
          complied with the notice  provisions of Sections 6.03 (1) and (2). The
          foregoing  provisions  are not  intended  to and  shall  not limit the
          responsibilities  of any  nominator or nominees,  or their  respective
          Affiliates  or  Associates   responsibilities  under  applicable  law,
          including, without limitation, federal and state securities laws.

               (4) The chairman of the  shareholders'  meeting may, if the facts
          warrant,  determine  and declare to the meeting that a nomination  was
          not made in accordance with the foregoing procedures, and if he should
          so  determine,  he shall so declare to the meeting  and the  defective
          nomination  shall  be  disregarded.   The   Corporation's   Nominating
          Committee  shall  evaluate  any  proper  nomination  and  may,  in its
          discretion, make a recommendation thereon to the shareholders.

     6.04 Removal.  Directors may be removed only for cause upon the affirmative
vote  of  -------  (a) 66 2/3 % of all  Voting  Shares  and  (b) an  Independent
Majority of Shareholders at a meeting duly called and held for that purpose upon
not less than 30 days' prior written notice.


                                   ARTICLE VII
                  PROVISIONS RELATING TO BUSINESS COMBINATIONS

     7.01  Definitions.  The following defined terms are used in other Articles,
and shall have the meanings specified below. -----------

     7.01.1  An  "Affiliate"  of, or a Person  "affiliated  with",  a  specified
Person,  means  a  Person  that  directly,  or  indirectly  through  one or more
intermediaries,  controls, or is controlled by, or is under common control with,
the Person specified.

     7.01.2 The terms  "Associate" or "associated  with",  as used to indicate a
relationship with any Person, mean:

               (1) Any  corporation,  organization  or  entity  (other  than the
          Corporation)  of which such  Person is an officer  or  partner,  or is
          directly  or  indirectly  the  beneficial  owner of 10% or more of any
          class of equity securities;

               (2) Any trust or other  estate in which such  Person has a 10% or
          greater  beneficial  interest  or as to which  such  Person  serves as
          trustee or in a similar fiduciary capacity;

               (3) Any  relative or spouse of such  Person,  or any  relative of
          such spouse who has the same home as such Person; or

               (4)  Any  investment  company  registered  under  the  Investment
          Company  Act of  1940  for  which  such  Person  or any  Affiliate  or
          Associate of such Person serves as investment adviser.

     7.01.3 A person shall be considered the "Beneficial  Owner" of and shall be
deemed  to  "beneficially  own" any  shares  of stock  (whether  or not owned of
record):

               (1) With  respect  to  which  such  Person  or any  Affiliate  or
          Associate  of such  Person  directly or  indirectly  has or shares (i)
          voting  power,  including the power to vote or to direct the voting of
          such shares of stock and/or (ii) investment power, including the power
          to dispose of or to direct the disposition of such shares of stock;

               (2) Where  such  Person or any  Affiliate  or  Associate  of such
          Person has (i) the right to acquire (whether such right is exercisable
          immediately  or only  after  the  passage  of  time)  pursuant  to any
          agreement,  arrangement  or  understanding  or upon  the  exercise  of
          conversion rights, exchange or purchase rights, warrants,  options, or
          otherwise,  and/or (ii) the right to vote  pursuant to any  agreement,
          arrangement  or  understanding  (whether  such  right  is  exercisable
          immediately or only after the passage of time); or

               (3)  Which  are   Beneficially   Owned   within  the  meaning  of
          subsections (1) or (2) of this Section 7.01.3 by any other Person with
          which  such  first-mentioned  Person  or  any  of  its  Affiliates  or
          Associates has any agreement, arrangement or understanding, written or
          verbal, formal or informal with respect to acquiring,  holding, voting
          or  disposing  of  any  shares  of  stock  of the  Corporation  or any
          Subsidiary of the  Corporation  or acquiring,  holding or disposing of
          all or  substantially  all, or any Substantial  Part, of the assets or
          businesses of the Corporation or a Subsidiary of the Corporation.

     For the  purpose  only of  determining  whether a Person is the  Beneficial
Owner of a percentage  specified in this Article VII of the  outstanding  Voting
Shares,  such shares  shall be deemed to include any  interest in Voting  Shares
which may be  issuable,  transferred  or voted or  disposed  of  pursuant to any
agreement,   trust,  arrangement  or  understanding  or  upon  the  exercise  of
conversion rights, exchange or purchase rights,  warrants,  options or otherwise
and which  Voting  Shares are  deemed to be  beneficially  owned by such  Person
pursuant to the foregoing provisions of this Section 7.01.3.

     7.01.4 A "Business Combination" means:

               (1) The sale, exchange,  lease,  transfer or other disposition to
          or with any Person or any Affiliate or Associate of any such Person by
          the Corporation or any of its Subsidiaries (in a single transaction or
          in a series of related  transactions) of all or substantially  all, or
          any Substantial Part, of its or their assets or businesses (including,
          without  limitation,  any securities issued by a Subsidiary and assets
          of a Subsidiary);

               (2) Any  merger,  consolidation  or  purchase  and/or  assumption
          ("P&A")  of  assets  and/or  liabilities  of  the  Corporation  or any
          Subsidiary  thereof  into or with another  Person or any  Affiliate or
          Associate of such person or into or with another  Person where,  after
          such merger,  consolidation or P&A, such Person alone or together with
          its Affiliates or Associates would be a Related Person or an Affiliate
          or an  Associate of a Related  Person,  in each case  irrespective  of
          which Person is the surviving entity in such merger or consolidation;

               (3)  Any  reclassification  of  securities  (including,   without
          limitation,   a  reverse  stock  split),   recapitalization  or  other
          transaction  (other than a redemption in accordance  with the terms of
          the security  redeemed) which has the effect,  directly or indirectly,
          of increasing other than pro rata with other Corporation shareholders,
          the  proportionate  amount of Voting Shares of the  Corporation or any
          Subsidiary  thereof which are Beneficially  Owned by a Related Person,
          or the  adoption  of any  plan or  proposal  of  partial  or  complete
          liquidation,   dissolution,   spinoff,  splitoff  or  splitup  of  the
          Corporation or any Subsidiary thereof; and

               (4) The  acquisition  after the date of adoption of these Amended
          and Restated Articles of Incorporation by a Person of Voting Shares or
          securities  convertible  into  or  exchangeable  for 5% or more of the
          Voting Shares or any voting securities or securities  convertible into
          5% or  more  of  the  voting  securities  of  any  Subsidiary  of  the
          Corporation,   or  the  acquisition   upon  the  issuance  thereof  of
          Beneficial  Ownership by a Related  Person of any rights,  warrants or
          options to acquire  any of the  foregoing  or any  combination  of the
          foregoing  Voting  Shares  or  voting   securities  of  a  Subsidiary;
          provided,  however,  this  subsection  (4)  shall  not  apply  to  the
          acquisition of any such Voting Shares, securities,  options, rights or
          warrants  issued  pursuant to any stock  option  plan or any  pension,
          profit  sharing,  benefit or stock  purchase  plans  maintained by the
          Corporation or any of its Subsidiaries.

     As used in this  definition,  a "series of related  transactions"  shall be
deemed to  include  a series of  transactions  with the same  Person  considered
together with all Affiliates and Associates of such Person.

     The foregoing provision of this Section 7.01.4 notwithstanding,  a Business
Combination  shall  not  include  any  merger,   consolidation,   P&A  or  other
transaction  described  in the  definition  of  Business  Combination  with  the
Corporation and/or any of its Subsidiaries, as a result of which a Person who is
not a Related Person prior to such transaction does not become a Related Person.

     7.01.5 A "Continuing Director" means a member of the Board of Directors who
either (i) was first elected as a director of the Corporation  prior to February
28,  2003  or (ii)  prior  to any  Person  becoming  a  Related  Person  and was
designated  as a  Continuing  Director  by a  majority  vote  of the  Continuing
Directors.

     7.01.6  "Independent  Majority of Shareholders" shall mean the holders of a
majority of the  outstanding  Voting Shares that are not  Beneficially  Owned or
controlled, directly or indirectly, by a Related Person.

     7.01.7 The term "Person"  shall mean any  individual,  partnership,  trust,
firm,  joint  venture,  corporation,  group  or  other  entity  (other  than the
Corporation,  any Subsidiary of the  Corporation or a trustee  holding stock for
the benefit of employees of the Corporation or its  Subsidiaries,  or any one of
them, pursuant to one or more employee benefit plans or arrangements).  When two
or  more  Persons  act  as  a  partnership,   limited  partnership,   syndicate,
association or other group for the purpose of acquiring,  holding,  or disposing
of shares of stock, such partnership,  syndicate,  association or group shall be
deemed a "Person".

     7.01.8 "Related  Person" means any Person which is the Beneficial  Owner as
of the date of  determination  by a majority of the Whole Board of  Directors or
immediately prior to the consummation of a Business Combination,  or both, of 5%
or  more  of the  Voting  Shares,  or any  Person  who  is an  Affiliate  of the
Corporation  and at any time within five years  preceding the  determination  of
such status by the Whole Board of Directors  was the  Beneficial  Owner of 5% or
more of the Corporation's  then outstanding  Voting Shares;  provided,  however,
that  "Related  Person"  shall not include (i) any Person who is the  Beneficial
Owner of more than 5% of the  Corporation's  Voting Shares on February 28, 2003,
(ii)  any  plan or  trust  established  for  the  benefit  of the  Corporation's
employees generally or (iii) any Subsidiary of the Corporation that holds Voting
Shares in a fiduciary  capacity,  whether or not it has the authority to vote or
dispose of such securities.

     7.01.9 The term "Substantial  Part" as used with reference to the assets of
the Corporation,  of any Subsidiary or of any Related Person means assets having
a value of more than 10% of the total consolidated assets of the Corporation and
its Subsidiaries as of the end of the  Corporation's  most recent quarter ending
prior to the time the determination is being made.

     7.01.10  "Subsidiary"  shall mean any  corporation or other entity of which
the Person in question owns not less than 50% of any class of equity securities,
directly or indirectly,  and  "Significant  Subsidiary"  shall mean a Subsidiary
that also meets the tests for a "significant  subsidiary"  under  Securities and
Exchange Commission Regulation S-X, Rule 1-02(w).

     7.01.11  "Voting  Shares" means all Shares of the  Corporation  entitled to
vote generally in the election of Corporation directors.

     7.01.12 "Whole Board of Directors" means the total number of directors that
the Corporation would have if there were no vacancies.

     7.01.13 Certain  Determinations  With Respect to Article VII. A majority of
the Whole Board of Directors  shall have the power to determine for the purposes
of this Article VII, on the basis of  information  known to them: (i) the number
of Voting  Shares of which any Person is the  Beneficial  Owner,  (ii) whether a
Person is an Affiliate or  Associate of another,  (iii)  whether a Person has an
agreement,  arrangement or understanding with another as to the matters referred
to in the definition of "Beneficial Owner" as hereinabove defined,  (iv) whether
the assets subject to any Business  Combination  constitute a "Substantial Part"
as  hereinabove  defined,  (v) whether  two or more  transactions  constitute  a
"series of related  transactions"  as hereinabove  defined,  and (vi) such other
matters with  respect to which a  determination  is required  under this Article
VII.

     7.01.14 Fiduciary Obligations.  Nothing contained in this Article VII shall
be  construed  to  relieve  any  Related  Person  from  any  fiduciary  or other
obligation imposed by law.

     7.02 Approval of Business Combinations.

     7.02.1 Maximum Votes Required. Whether or not a vote of the shareholders is
otherwise  required in connection with the transaction,  neither the Corporation
nor any of its Subsidiaries shall complete any Business  Combination without the
prior affirmative vote at a meeting of the Corporation's  shareholders as to all
shares owned:

               (1) By the holders of not less than a two-thirds (66 2/3%) of the
          Corporation's outstanding Voting Shares, voting separately as classes,
          and

               (2) By an Independent Majority of Shareholders.

     The affirmative vote required by this Section is in addition to the vote of
the holders of any class or series of Corporation  Shares otherwise  required by
law,  these  Articles  of  Incorporation,  including,  without  limitation,  any
resolution  which has been adopted by the Board of Directors  providing  for the
issuance  of a class or series  of  Shares.  Such  favorable  votes  shall be in
addition to any shareholder  vote which would be required  without  reference to
this Section 6.02.1 and shall be required  notwithstanding the fact that no vote
may be  required,  or that some lesser  percentage  may be  specified  by law or
elsewhere in this  Certificate of  Incorporation,  the  Corporation's  Bylaws or
otherwise.

     7.02.2  Minimum Vote  Required.  The provisions of Section 7.02.1 shall not
apply to a particular Business Combination,  and such Business Combination shall
require only the affirmative vote of a majority of the Corporation's outstanding
Voting Shares, if such Business  Combination is: (i) approved and recommended to
the  shareholders by the  affirmative  vote of two-thirds (66 2/3%) of the Whole
Board of Directors  of the  Corporation,  and (ii) a majority of the  Continuing
Directors.

     7.03  Evaluation  of Business  Combinations,  etc. In  connection  with the
exercise of its  judgment  in  determining  what is in the best  interest of the
Corporation and its shareholders  when evaluating an actual or proposed Business
Combination,  a tender or exchange offer, a solicitation of options or offers to
purchase or sell  Corporation  Shares by another  Person,  or a solicitation  of
proxies to vote Corporation Shares by another Person, the Corporation's Board of
Directors, in addition to considering the adequacy and form of the consideration
to be paid in connection  with any such  transaction,  shall consider all of the
following factors and any other factors which it deems relevant:  (i) the social
and economic  effects of the  transaction or proposal on the Corporation and its
Subsidiaries,  its and their  employees,  depositors,  loan and other customers,
creditors and the  communities  in which the  Corporation  and its  Subsidiaries
operate or are located; (ii) the business and financial condition,  and earnings
prospects of the  acquiring  Person or Persons,  including,  but not limited to,
debt service and other existing financial obligations,  financial obligations to
be incurred in  connection  with the  acquisition,  and other  likely  financial
obligations of the acquiring Person or Persons,  and the possible effect of such
conditions upon the Corporation and its  Subsidiaries  and the other elements of
the  communities in which the Corporation  and its  Subsidiaries  operate or are
located; (iii) the competence, experience, and integrity of the Person and their
management proposing or making such actions; (iv) the prospects for a successful
conclusion of the Business Combination;  and (v) the Corporation's  prospects as
an  independent  entity.  This  Section  7.03 shall not be deemed to provide any
constituency  the right to be considered by the Board of Directors in connection
with any transaction or matter.


                                  ARTICLE VIII
                               SPECIAL PROVISIONS

     In  furtherance  and not in limitation of the powers  conferred by law, the
following  provisions  for  regulation  of the  Corporation,  its  directors and
shareholders are hereby established:

     8.01  Bylaws.  The  Corporation's  Board of  Directors  is  authorized  and
empowered,  upon the affirmative vote of two-thirds (66 2/3%) of the Whole Board
of Directors and a majority of the Continuing Directors, to amend, alter, change
or repeal  any and all of the  Corporation's  Bylaws  and to adopt  new  Bylaws,
including, without limitation,  establishing the exact number of directors to be
fixed  by  resolution  adopted  by the  Board  of  Directors  from  time to time
consistent   with  Section  6.01  of  these  Articles  of   Incorporation.   The
shareholders may also amend the Bylaws by the affirmative vote of 66 2/3% of all
Voting Shares entitled to vote on such amendment and by the affirmative  vote of
an Independent Majority of Shareholders.

     8.02  Shareholder  Action by  Consent.  No action  may be taken by  written
consent  except  as  may be  provided  in the  designation  of the  preferences,
limitations  and relative  rights of any series of the  Corporation's  Preferred
Stock.  Any  action  required  or  permitted  to be  taken  by  the  holders  of
Corporation  Common  Stock must be effected  at a duly called  annual or special
meeting of such  holders,  and may not be  effected by any consent in writing by
such holders.

     8.03 Shareholder Requests for Special Meetings. The Corporation will hold a
special  meeting of shareholders on a proposed issue or issues at the request of
shareholders  only upon the  receipt  from the  holders of half (50%) of all the
votes  entitled  to be cast on the  proposed  issue or issues of  signed,  dated
written  demands  for the meeting  describing  the purpose for which it is to be
held.


                                   ARTICLE IX
                              SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS

     9.01  Proposals.  In  addition to the right of the  Corporation's  Board of
Directors  to  submit  proposals  for  a  shareholder  vote,   proposals  for  a
shareholder  vote  may  be  made  in  connection  with  any  annual  meeting  of
Corporation  shareholders by any holder of voting shares ("Proponent")  entitled
to vote generally in the election of directors if that shareholder complies with
all of the provisions of this Section 9.01.

               (1)  Advance  notice of such  proposal  shall be  received by the
          Secretary of the  Corporation  (a) with respect to an annual  meeting,
          not less than 60 days nor more than 90 days  prior to the  anniversary
          of the last annual  meeting of  Corporation  shareholders  (or, if the
          date of the  annual  meeting is changed by more that 20 days from such
          anniversary  date,  within 10 days after the date that the Corporation
          mails or otherwise  gives notice of the date of such  meeting) and (b)
          with  respect  to a special  meeting,  not later than the close of the
          tenth day  following the date on which notice of the meeting was first
          mailed to shareholders.

               (2) Each notice  under  Section  9.01(1)  shall set forth (i) the
          names and business  addresses of the Proponent and all persons  acting
          in  concert  with the  Proponent,  (ii) the  name and  address  of the
          Proponent and persons  identified in clause (i), as they appear on the
          Corporation's books (if they so appear); (iii) the class and number of
          Voting Shares of the Corporation  that are  beneficially  owned by the
          Proponent and the persons identified in clause (i); (iv) a description
          of the proposal containing all material  information relating thereto;
          and (v) such other  information  as the Board of Directors  reasonably
          determines  is  necessary  or  appropriate  to  enable  the  Board  of
          Directors  and   shareholders  of  the  Corporation  to  consider  the
          proposal.

               (3) The  proposal  made by a  shareholder  may  only be made in a
          meeting  of  the   shareholders  of  the  Corporation  at  which  such
          shareholder is present in person or by proxy,  and can only be made by
          a shareholder who has therefore complied with the notice provisions of
          Sections  9.01(1) and (2), and is subject  further to compliance  with
          all applicable laws, including, without limitation,  federal and state
          securities laws.

               (4) The Chairman of the  shareholders'  meeting may, if the facts
          warrant,  determine and declare to the meeting that a proposal was not
          made in accordance with the foregoing procedures,  and if he should so
          determine,  he shall  so  declare  to the  meeting  and the  defective
          proposal shall be disregarded.



                                    ARTICLE X
                     AMENDMENT OF ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION

     The Corporation  reserves the right to amend,  alter,  change or repeal any
provision  contained in these  Articles of  Incorporation,  in the manner now or
hereafter prescribed by statute or these Articles, and all rights conferred upon
shareholders  herein are granted subject to this reservation.  These Articles of
Incorporation  may be amended as provided by law;  provided,  however,  that the
affirmative  vote of the  holders of  two-thirds  (66 2/3%) of all of the Voting
Shares outstanding and entitled to vote, voting as classes,  if applicable,  and
an Independent  Majority of Shareholders shall be required to approve any change
of Articles VI, VII, IX and X of these Articles of Incorporation.




                    SEACOAST BANKING CORPORATION OF FLORIDA
           PROXY SOLICITED BY AND ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
              FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS TO BE HELD ON
                              THURSDAY, MAY 1, 2003

The undersigned  hereby appoints William R. Hahl and John R. Turgeon,  or either
of them, each with full power of substitution, as Proxies, to vote all shares of
the Common Stock of Seacoast Banking  Corporation of Florida  ("Seacoast") which
the  undersigned  may be  entitled to vote if  personally  present at the Annual
Meeting of Shareholders to be held at the Port St. Lucie Community Center,  2195
S.E. Airoso Boulevard,  Port St. Lucie,  Florida,  on Thursday,  May 1, 2003, at
3:00 P.M.,  local time, and at any  adjournments or  postponements  thereof (the
"Annual Meeting"),  as directed below, upon the proposals described in the Proxy
Statement and the Notice of Annual Meeting of Shareholders, both dated March 18,
2003, the receipt of which is acknowledged.

When this proxy is properly  executed,  all shares of both classes of stock will
be voted in the manner  directed herein by the  undersigned  shareholder.  If no
direction is specified, this proxy will be voted FOR all proposals.

                                        FOR all nominees      WITHHOLD AUTHORITY
1.  Election of Directors               for director listed   (to vote all
                                        (except as marked to   nominees listed)
                                        the contrary below)

   Class I     Jeffrey C. Bruner
               Christoper E. Fogal            |_|                   |_|
               Dale M. Hudson
               John R. Santarsiero, Jr.

   Class III   Stephen E. Bohner
               T. Michael Crook

To withhold authority to vote for any individual  nominee,  write that nominee's
name in the space provided.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Amendments to Articles of Incorporation
   Revising Provisions for Supermajority
   Approvals for Business Combinations.           FOR      AGAINST     ABSTAIN

   To approve amendments to Seacoast's
   Articles revising the provisions relating      |_|        |_|         |_|
   to supermajority approvals for certain
   business combinations.

3. Adjournment of the Annual Meeting              FOR      AGAINST      ABSTAIN

   To grant the Proxies discretionary authority
   to vote to adjourn the Annual Meeting for up
   to 120 days to allow for the solicitation of   |_|        |_|         |_|
   additional proxies in the event that there
   are insufficient shares voted at the Annual
   Meeting to approve Proposal 2.

4. In  their  discretion  the  Proxies  are  authorized to  vote upon such other
   matters as may properly  come before the Annual Meeting or any adjournment or
   postponement thereof.


SIGNATURE(S)_________________DATE_____________   THIS  PROXY IS SOLICITED BY THE
                                                 BOARD OF  DIRECTORS OF SEACOAST
                                                 BANKING CORPORATION OF FLORIDA,
SIGNATURE(S)_________________DATE_____________   AND MAY BE REVOKED PRIOR TO ITS
                                                 EXERCISE.

Please  sign  exactly  as name  appears  hereon.  When  shares are held by joint
tenants,  both should sign. When signing as attorney,  executor,  administrator,
trustee or guardian,  please give full title as such. If a  corporation,  please
sign in full  corporate  name by President  or other  authorized  officer.  If a
partnership, please sign in partnership name by authorized person.