United States

Bulow Plantation Ruins Historic State Park

Antebellum plantation ruins in northeastern Florida

Location

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Historical Context

About

Bulow Plantation Ruins Historic State Park is a Florida State Park in Flagler Beach, Florida. It is three miles west of Flagler Beach on CR 2001, south of SR 100, and contains the ruins of an ante-bellum plantation and its sugar mill, built of coquina, a fossiliferous sedimentary rock composed of shells. It was the largest plantation in East Florida, and was operated with the forced labor of enslaved Africans and African Americans.

Paleolithic
Mesolithic
Neolithic
Chalcolithic
Bronze Age
Iron Age
Classical Period
Post-Classical Period
Early Modern Period
Industrial Period
Contemporary Period
Temporal Epochs

Historical Timeline

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Added to National Register

29 September 1970

Land acquired by Major Bulow

1821

Major Bulow dies; son inherits

1823

Audubon visits Bulow Plantation

Christmas 1831 – January 1832

Plantation destroyed

1836

State acquisition

1945

Dedicated as State Historic Park

1957

Classification

Archaeological Features

Unique architectural and cultural elements found at this historical site

category

Industrial and Craft Structures

Sugar mill
category

Agricultural and Land Use Features

Field Systems
category

Domestic and Habitation Structures

Houses
Knowledge Base

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Reference

Details

Country

United States

Coordinates

29.44° N, -81.14° E