The ruined walls found along the Cedar Point hiking trails once anchored a plantation whose owners supplied salt to the Confederacy during the Civil War. Enslaved people farmed and hunted the land, tended the household, and boiled tons of salt from seawater.
Though it seems remote today, Cedar Point was heavily farmed as early as 1783, when the King of Spain granted it to the Samuel Mills family. The Fitzpatrick family acquired it in 1795 and started salt operations, followed by the Browards around 1848. Due to the rich surrounding salt marsh, the land’s heritage of sustaining coastal people goes back thousands of years.
Archaeologists are systematically searching the area to find artifacts that evoke the daily lives of enslaved people who toiled on coastal plantations. At least fifteen skilled workers, held as slaves, constructed the plantation's main house, kitchen house, and outbuildings of tabby, a concrete like mixture made of oyster shells. Our understanding of the site is fairly limited, but by using thorough investigative and preservation practices we can bring its story back into the light.
Once visible from the St. Johns River, the plantation owners house (pictured below) and outbuildings were shelled during the Civil War.
These ruins are a great example of how we can reconstruct our understanding of the past through historic research and archaeological investigation.
Preservation at Work
Left image
Tabby Ruins in 2008
Credit: NPS Photo
Right image
Tabby Ruins in 2020
Credit: NPS Photo
Historic preservationists and masons have worked to keep these ruins standing. Stabilization efforts continue. Please do your part to protect history by not climbing, marking, or touching the walls.