Historical Archaeology at the Cedar Shake House (8LE1947): The African-American Heritage of Alfred B. Maclay Gardens State Park

Alfred B. Maclay Gardens State Park, located in Tallahassee, Florida, is home to one of the more beautiful ornamental gardens in the State of Florida. The gardens were designed and developed by Alfred B. Maclay between 1923 and 1944, and donated to the state in 1953 by his wife Louise Fleischmann Ma...

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Other Authors: Lindstrom, Triel Ellen (authoraut)
Format: Others
Language:English
English
Published: Florida State University
Subjects:
Online Access:http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-1206
id ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_175762
record_format oai_dc
collection NDLTD
language English
English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Anthropology
spellingShingle Anthropology
Historical Archaeology at the Cedar Shake House (8LE1947): The African-American Heritage of Alfred B. Maclay Gardens State Park
description Alfred B. Maclay Gardens State Park, located in Tallahassee, Florida, is home to one of the more beautiful ornamental gardens in the State of Florida. The gardens were designed and developed by Alfred B. Maclay between 1923 and 1944, and donated to the state in 1953 by his wife Louise Fleischmann Maclay and their two children Georgiana Maclay Bowers and Alfred B. Maclay, Jr. Mr. Maclay was an affluent northerner who was one of many to buy old antebellum plantations in the Red Hills of Florida for use as winter retreats and hunting grounds. This land was home to African-American tenant farmers, some of whom Mr. Maclay employed as domestic servants, laborers and gardeners. In fact, the land upon which Maclay established his gardens and the majority of the land that now comprises the park were once owned by African-Americans, purchased by tenant farmers and ex-slaves from antebellum planter and Florida Attorney General Mariano Papy in the 1870s. The African-American community on the shores of Lake Hall and Lake Overstreet is historic, having endured slavery, farmed through the mid-twentieth century as both tenant farmers and landowners, and worked at Maclay Gardens as plantation and then state employees, remnants surviving to this day in neighborhoods adjacent to the park. This project is part of a larger effort to research the African-American heritage associated with the park so that it can be effectively interpreted to the visiting public. It consisted of archaeological fieldwork and analysis that focused on the Cedar Shake House, a historic farmstead on Lake Overstreet just north of the Maclay House, and historical research on the larger African-American community and socio-cultural context. Evidence was recovered via a pedestrian survey and the dating and spatial analysis of surface artifacts that supports the contention that Maclay tenants and former residents Annie and Henry Sawyer's livelihood had shifted from farming to plantation employment between the late 1930s and early 1950s when the site was vacated, a common trend as African-Americans sought to escape the cycle of debt associated with tenant farming in favor of wage earning jobs on and then off the plantation. While no evidence of an earlier occupation has yet been recovered, no evidence recovered to date precludes the possibility that the Cedar Shake House was also occupied around the turn of the twentieth century by members of the Robinson family, African-Americans who purchased the property shortly after Emancipation. Additional subsurface investigations are currently underway at the site, conducted by the National Park Service. The Cedar Shake House and other historic homesteads located within park boundaries hold the potential to reveal information not just about former occupants' daily lives but larger transitions, such as shifts from landownership to tenancy or tenant farming to plantation employment, spurred by economic, social and political factors that continue to shape our lives today. === A Thesis Submitted to the Department of Anthropology in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts. === Spring Semester, 2008. === March 31, 2008. === Lake Hall, Lake Overstreet, Mariano D. Papy, Tenant Farm, Leon County === Includes bibliographical references. === Glen Doran, Professor Directing Thesis; Bill Parkinson, Committee Member; Bruce Grindal, Committee Member.
author2 Lindstrom, Triel Ellen (authoraut)
author_facet Lindstrom, Triel Ellen (authoraut)
title Historical Archaeology at the Cedar Shake House (8LE1947): The African-American Heritage of Alfred B. Maclay Gardens State Park
title_short Historical Archaeology at the Cedar Shake House (8LE1947): The African-American Heritage of Alfred B. Maclay Gardens State Park
title_full Historical Archaeology at the Cedar Shake House (8LE1947): The African-American Heritage of Alfred B. Maclay Gardens State Park
title_fullStr Historical Archaeology at the Cedar Shake House (8LE1947): The African-American Heritage of Alfred B. Maclay Gardens State Park
title_full_unstemmed Historical Archaeology at the Cedar Shake House (8LE1947): The African-American Heritage of Alfred B. Maclay Gardens State Park
title_sort historical archaeology at the cedar shake house (8le1947): the african-american heritage of alfred b. maclay gardens state park
publisher Florida State University
url http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-1206
_version_ 1719317607191937024
spelling ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_1757622020-06-05T03:06:55Z Historical Archaeology at the Cedar Shake House (8LE1947): The African-American Heritage of Alfred B. Maclay Gardens State Park Lindstrom, Triel Ellen (authoraut) Doran, Glen (professor directing thesis) Parkinson, Bill (committee member) Grindal, Bruce (committee member) Department of Anthropology (degree granting department) Florida State University (degree granting institution) Text text Florida State University Florida State University English eng 1 online resource computer application/pdf Alfred B. Maclay Gardens State Park, located in Tallahassee, Florida, is home to one of the more beautiful ornamental gardens in the State of Florida. The gardens were designed and developed by Alfred B. Maclay between 1923 and 1944, and donated to the state in 1953 by his wife Louise Fleischmann Maclay and their two children Georgiana Maclay Bowers and Alfred B. Maclay, Jr. Mr. Maclay was an affluent northerner who was one of many to buy old antebellum plantations in the Red Hills of Florida for use as winter retreats and hunting grounds. This land was home to African-American tenant farmers, some of whom Mr. Maclay employed as domestic servants, laborers and gardeners. In fact, the land upon which Maclay established his gardens and the majority of the land that now comprises the park were once owned by African-Americans, purchased by tenant farmers and ex-slaves from antebellum planter and Florida Attorney General Mariano Papy in the 1870s. The African-American community on the shores of Lake Hall and Lake Overstreet is historic, having endured slavery, farmed through the mid-twentieth century as both tenant farmers and landowners, and worked at Maclay Gardens as plantation and then state employees, remnants surviving to this day in neighborhoods adjacent to the park. This project is part of a larger effort to research the African-American heritage associated with the park so that it can be effectively interpreted to the visiting public. It consisted of archaeological fieldwork and analysis that focused on the Cedar Shake House, a historic farmstead on Lake Overstreet just north of the Maclay House, and historical research on the larger African-American community and socio-cultural context. Evidence was recovered via a pedestrian survey and the dating and spatial analysis of surface artifacts that supports the contention that Maclay tenants and former residents Annie and Henry Sawyer's livelihood had shifted from farming to plantation employment between the late 1930s and early 1950s when the site was vacated, a common trend as African-Americans sought to escape the cycle of debt associated with tenant farming in favor of wage earning jobs on and then off the plantation. While no evidence of an earlier occupation has yet been recovered, no evidence recovered to date precludes the possibility that the Cedar Shake House was also occupied around the turn of the twentieth century by members of the Robinson family, African-Americans who purchased the property shortly after Emancipation. Additional subsurface investigations are currently underway at the site, conducted by the National Park Service. The Cedar Shake House and other historic homesteads located within park boundaries hold the potential to reveal information not just about former occupants' daily lives but larger transitions, such as shifts from landownership to tenancy or tenant farming to plantation employment, spurred by economic, social and political factors that continue to shape our lives today. A Thesis Submitted to the Department of Anthropology in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts. Spring Semester, 2008. March 31, 2008. Lake Hall, Lake Overstreet, Mariano D. Papy, Tenant Farm, Leon County Includes bibliographical references. Glen Doran, Professor Directing Thesis; Bill Parkinson, Committee Member; Bruce Grindal, Committee Member. Anthropology FSU_migr_etd-1206 http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-1206 This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s). The copyright in theses and dissertations completed at Florida State University is held by the students who author them. http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A175762/datastream/TN/view/Historical%20Archaeology%20at%20the%20Cedar%20Shake%20House%20%288LE1947%29.jpg