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Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve & Fort Caroline National MemorialSketch of plantation house
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Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve & Fort Caroline National Memorial
History of Kingsley Plantation

During Florida’s plantation period (1763-1865), Fort George Island was owned by many planters. The site name comes from one of those owners, Zephaniah Kingsley. The Kingsleys lived here from 1814 to 1837.

Kingsley Family and Society

Slave Community

Crops of Kingsley Plantation

Sea Island Cotton

Tabby

Archaeology

Post-Plantation History

Chronology of Fort George Island

Slave Trade Talk and Exhibits

Florida History Online (Timucuan Preserve)

External (not Timucuan Preserve) Websites Related to Kingsley Plantation:

Ethnohistorical Study of the Kingsley Plantation Community, by Antoinette Jackson with Allan F. Burns, UF Department of Anthropology, 2006

External (non-NPS) Websites Related to Kingsley Plantation:

The Kingsley Plantation (883 KB pdf) - Article from Florida History & the Arts magazine, used with permission of the Florida Department of State, Office of Cultural, Historical and Information Programs. For more information or to subscribe, call 1.800.847.7278 or click here. (You are leaving the National Park Service website.)

UNF, UF Students Dig Through Dirt for Clues to History (You are leaving the NPS website.)

Great Fort George Isle - this website is part of "Florida History Online" and describes the British plantation era on Fort George Island. (You are leaving the NPS website.)

Short video about Kingsley Plantation, hosted on the Visit Florida website. Includes and interview with a Park Ranger. (You are leaving the NPS website.)

"The Atlantic Mind: Zephaniah Kingsley, Slavery, and the Politics of Race in the Atlantic World" - Master's Thesis by Mark J. Fleszar, Georgia State University, 2009 (You are leaving the NPS website.)

Male painted bunting, photographed by Roger Clark  

Did You Know?
Painted Buntings return to nest within the boundaries of the Timucuan Preserve each year in late April.
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Last Updated: September 05, 2009 at 17:57 EST