"Round Marsh" by Duplaga , public domain
TimucuanKingsley Plantation |
The Kingsley Plantation at Timucuan Ecological & Historic Preserve (EHPRES) in Florida. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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Kingsley Plantation
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
Timucuan Preserve
Tabby
Tabby was a constant backdrop to life for
everyone at this plantation. Each morning
enslaved men, women and children opened
their eyes to the sight of four tabby walls.
They began their day’s labor in the cool, dark
tabby barn, gathering their tools and
supplies. At night, they closed their eyes to
the walls surrounding them.
Historic photograph of the slave cabins (Florida State Archives)
Today, the slave cabins, barn, kitchen house
and main plantation house, built by enslaved
people, are lasting relics of a life of bondage
and struggle. They may look like ancient
ruins, but the slave cabins were built less than
two hundred years ago.
A Blending
of Cultures
Tabby represents a blend of West
African, Spanish, and Native American
cultures. The oyster shells used to make
the tabby were mined from shell
mounds created by native peoples
thousands of years before European
arrival in the new world.
Tabby Walls
The slave cabins were built in the 1820s,
during Zephaniah Kingsley’s
ownership of the plantation. These
buildings have borne witness to nearly
two hundred years of history on Fort
George Island.
For the enslaved people, plantation life
revolved around these tabby structures.
The tabby slave quarters, barn and
kitchen house were centers of activity
for the plantation and its workers.
By the early eighteenth century, tabby
was used both here and in West Africa.
It is unclear whether tabby’s origins lie
in the coastal southeast or whether the
technique was brought from West
Africa through the slave trade.
A close-up photograph of tabby (NPS)
Construction
Methods
The tabby buildings were
constructed by enslaved workers
who were skilled carpenters, tabby
makers and brick layers. The
structures they built 200 years ago
remain today.
Tabby was created entirely from
locally available materials. Oyster
shells piled into middens by the
Timucua were burned and ground
for lime. Sand and water were mixed
in, and often whole shells were
added to speed the hardening of the
tabby and to increase volume and
durability.
Whole shell tabby was pourable and
used much like today’s concrete.
This type of construction was used
for the slave cabins, kitchen house,
and the walls of the barn. Tabby,
without the whole shells, could also
be made into bricks, which were
used in the barn and the first floor of
the kitchen kouse, as well as the
fireplaces at the slave cabins.
If These Walls
Could Speak…
If these walls could speak, they
would speak of a life of bondage. At
the slave cabins, the walls would tell
about family life in the slave
community and families’ struggles
to remain courageous and strong in
the face of bondage in a strange
land.
Once it hardened, the whole shell
tabby was covered with a protective
coat of lime putty, making the walls
smooth. Little of this putty remains
today.
There are holes in the walls of the slave
cabins because wooden spreader pins
were used to hold the frame parallel
during construction. Once the pins
were removed, the holes were filled in,
but the filler has since deteriorated.
Tabby was poured one layer at a time into a
wooden mold held in place with spreader pins.
for the owner and his family, and the
stories told by the enslaved kitchen
workers to pass the long day of work
and heat.
The barn walls would tell about the
tools, sacks, bales of cotton, corn,
horses and livestock stored in and
around the barn.
The kitchen walls would recount
the preparation of countless meals
Near the slave cabins, late 19th century
Home Life
Tabby proved to be a sturdy,
weatherproof material that kept heat
out in the summer and held warmth in
during the winter.
Both warmth and cooking were
provided by tabby brick fireplaces.
Several of these were later replaced
with the red brick fireplaces you see
today. Some cabins were larger than
others, and some had tabby partition
walls inside, while others were one
room.
Upon completing their daily tasks,
slaves tended to their personal needs.
This included working their own food
plots, cooking, fixing their homes, and
raising livestock. Slave families
struggled to keep traditions alive,
passing along African heritage during
the evening work at the cabins.
Historic photograph of the slave quarters (NPS)
Today, it is difficult to imagine that such
a diverse culture could evolve from the
institution of slavery. These cabins stand
as a testimony to the enslaved men,
women, and children that lived on Fort
George Island.
The tabby preservation project protects
the historical craftsmanship and
prevents further erosion due to
environmental processes by cleaning the
buildings and replacing the lime putty
coating that the structures had
originally.
Tabby Today:
Preservation
Tabby preservation in progress (NPS)
For updates on tabby preservation
and stabilization, visit our website:
http://www.nps.gov/timu
It also protects the buildings against
their greatest danger – human damage
from touching, leaning on, or
vandalizing the buildings.
By preserving out past, we can protect
these buildings for the future.
EXPERIENCE YOUR AMERICA