Miccosukee Plantation

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Miccosukee Plantation was a medium-sized

Indian Removal
in the 1830s. He depended on the labor of enslaved African Americans to develop the plantation and produce cotton as a commodity crop.

Location

Miccosukee Plantation was located in eastern Leon County near Lake Miccosukee and the village of Miccosukee, most likely north of Blakely Plantation.

Plantation specifics

The Leon County Florida 1860 Agricultural Census shows that Miccosukee Plantation had the following:

  • Improved Land: 1400 acres (5½ km2)
  • Unimproved Land: 1300 acres (5 km2)
  • Cash value of plantation: $35,000
  • Cash value of farm implements/machinery: $250
  • Cash value of farm animals: $15,000
  • Number of slaves: 80
  • Bushels of corn: 5000
  • Bales of cotton: 180

Miller grazed 266 head of cattle, 160 sheep, and 250 hogs on the lowlands of Miccosukee.

Owner

Miller was born in 1798 in Duplin County, North Carolina where he became a merchant and was appointed postmaster. He migrated to Florida but returned briefly to Duplin County to marry Sarah Eliza Houston in 1850. She returned with him to Florida. Miller died in 1865 and is buried in Leon County.

Sources

  • Paisley, Clifton; From Cotton To Quail, University of Florida Press, c1968.

External links