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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVC9_the-river-of-may_Jacksonville-FL.html
"[H]aving landed [on the River of May's shore]... we saw the chief of that country, ... he ... showed such enthusiasm that he almost lost his composure. He came up to us... repeating ...'friend, friend.'"Captain Ren? de Laundonni?re, 1564 Capta…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMRNA_slave-cabins_Jacksonville-FL.html
From the earliest age, children were trained to do their parents' work. They were terrified of the punishment their parents endured. Parents taught their enslaved children strict obedience so they could survive. And yet, like children today, they …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMRMM_slave-cabins_Jacksonville-FL.html
The slave quarters were a place to find identity and strength through family, faith, and shared experiences. Many American traditions originate from the daily activities and beliefs of enslaved people. Practices that survive today revolve aroun…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMRL8_african-identity_Jacksonville-FL.html
Artifacts recovered by archaeologists provide clues as to who these enslaved African men, women and children were. This is most easily recognized within the realm of spirituality or religion, which is resistant to change. However, the physical rem…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMRCS_african-identity_Jacksonville-FL.html
The birthplace of African-American archaeology can be traced to Kingsley Plantation, where archaeologists in 1968 first began to search for artifacts that reflected African identity. Many of the slaves that lived here during Zephaniah Kingsley's e…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMRCN_slave-cabins_Jacksonville-FL.html
The island's landscape has changed dramatically since the plantation era. Gone are the roofs, fruit trees, wells, and garden plots. Trees and grasses now replace fields once tilled by slaves. To be a slave was to be a human being under conditio…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMR8Q_slave-cabins_Jacksonville-FL.html
In front of you are the remains of 25 cabins, the homes of 60 to 80 men, women, and children. These people had the strength to survive the misery of slavery. Before dawn, slaves left for their day's labor, or to use their specialized skills. Th…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMR7U_slave-cabins_Jacksonville-FL.html
Slaves actively resisted bondage by purposefully slowing down their work pace, faking illness, or even mutilating themselves in order to lessen their value as human property. Resisting the inhumanity of their enslaved condition, slaves struggle…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMR4Y_slave-cabins_Jacksonville-FL.html
Constructed nearly 200 hundred years ago, these cabins were home to enslaved people. Following emancipation, former slaves lived here and worked the land. Slowly, individuals and families moved away, leaving the buildings to fall into ruin. Tab…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMR4S_a-very-comfortable-habitation_Jacksonville-FL.html
Historic references to the plantation house on Fort George Island are tantalizingly brief. The first detailed descriptions of the house and structural changes were recorded in the 20th century. From this vantage point, you can see the changes that…
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