Thursday, June 18, 2015

Sandra Arvelo Kingsley in the Florida Times Union (2008 Kingsley Heritage Celebration)

Sandra Lebron Kingsley Descendant
Sandra Arvelo Kingsley, Kingsley descendant and "world's best mom" speaks at the Kingsley Heritage Celebration.
Sandra Arvelo Kingsley, a great-great-great-granddaughter of Anna and Zephaniah Kingsley, and her brother Wences flew from the Dominican Republic to attend the 2008 Kingsley Heritage Celebration. Sandra introduced the main event, a guided letter reading titled "Zephaniah Kingsley: World Traveller" and prepared by historian and Kingsley specialist Dr. Daniel L. Schafer, Professor Emeritus at the University of North Florida.

The event was covered by the Florida Times Union, as seen on the screenshot of the website, above. The article was titled "Descendants of Slaveholder Join to Note History: Zephaniah and Anna Kingsley Are Recalled at a Family Reunion."

Kingsley Heritage Celebration 2008
Cover of the Kingsley Heritage Celebration program. The images are, from left to right: Easter Bartley, formerly enslaved at Kingsley Plantation and Emma Vera Baxter, Granddaughter of Zephaniah and Anna Kingsley through their daughter Mary.

Aerial view of Fort George Island and Kingsley Plantation

Kingsley Plantation aerial view
Aerial view of Kingsley Plantation and Fort George Island.
Image source: http://www.unf.edu/floridahistoryonline/Bartram/February_1766/10-11feb1766.htm
Amazing aerial view of Fort George Island and Kingsley Plantation. I love the expanse of green, the setting is absolutely stunning. To me it's one of the most beautiful places on Earth! This image was taken from the University of North Florida's Florida History Online website and the original caption reads:

The northwest corner of Fort George Island, the site of Kingsley Plantation of the National Park Service. The building on the left is the oldest plantation house in Florida. Built in 1796 for John McQueen, it was subsequently the domicile of John H. McIntosh, Zephaniah Kingsley, and other planters. A map drawn in 1791 by Spanish engineer Mariano de la Rocque shows a second north to south road on the island that terminated at this site.

Zephaniah Kingsley Jr.'s handwriting and Signature

Zephaniah Kingsley handwriting and signature
A sample of Zephaniah Kingsley Jr.'s handwriting and signature.
This is a sample of Zephaniah's original handwriting and signature. I guess in the absence of a portrait, this could offer a glimpse into the man, since handwriting is a very personal thing.

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

What the plantation looked like during Kingsley's tenure


Kingsley Plantation in the 1820s
What the plantation looked like when the Kingsleys lived there.
Photo source: I forgot!. contact me if you're the owner and I'll gladly remove it or credit you.
This image, shamelessly stolen by me from the web (for credit, see caption above) depicts Kingsley Plantation as it might have looked like when Zephaniah and Anna were living there. Since Ana's house was built in the 1820s, I'd like to believe that this is what the plantation might have looked like when my great-great-great-grandfather John Maxwell Kingsley—the fourth and last of Ana and Zephaniah's children—was born there in 1824. The image comes from an information panel located on the plantation.

Basically of note are the following:

  • There were two chimneys and no interior staircase (one chimney is missing today, and an interior staircase was added in the late nineteenth century)
  • There were only four corner rooms, the rooms placed in between with large bay windows were added later
  • The covered walkway connecting the two structures was also added later
  • The columns of the main house were cylindrical. At some point those were changed for rectangular columns (see my post titled "Oh, those State Park days"), but I believe that during restoration work on the basement one of the original columns was found and during a subsequent restoration of the house the rectangular columns were taken down and were replaced by replicas of the original cylindrical columns.

Oh, those State Park days...

Kingsley Plantation before NPS transfer
Kingsley Plantation as part of Florida State Parks.
Image source: http://www.cowart.info/MyWeb_005.htm 
I came across these images of Kingsley Plantation while doing my usual Googling for all things Kingsley. They depict the main house and the remains of the slave cabins back when the site was under the stewardship of Florida State Parks.

When I first visited the house as a teenager, with my family, on our first pilgrimage to the Plantation, the site was still a state park. Those were the days when the house was furnished with antique furniture (some of which belonged to the Gibbs), when a peacock fan held sway over the dinning room and the tour guide would pull the string and swing the fan (which hung from the ceiling), all the while explaining how "that's how the servants would do it!" There was one carved mahogany chair that "could have belonged to Zephaniah Kingsley," I think it's no longer displayed so that myth was debunked, but if it had been Kingsley's it would certainly have been the only original Kingsley object at Kingsley Plantation. 

Kingsley Plantation Slave Cabins before NPS transfer
Kingsley Plantation as part of Florida State Parks.
Remains of the slave cabins.
Image source: http://www.cowart.info/MyWeb_005.htm 
Anyway, soon thereafter the plantation was transferred to the NPS and a more updated museography was installed which removed the furnishings and installed information panels, and the old quaint but outdated photocopied brochures (one of which I keep and hope to scan and post soonish) gave way to the amazing gridded NPS brochures designed in 1977 by the legendary graphic designer Massimo Vignelli, of the 1970s-NY-Subway-Map fame. The site was also incorporated, along with Fort Caroline, into Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve.

Here' some official information from Florida MemoryKingsley Plantation was a state park from the 1950s until 1989. Tours of the house, furnished with antiques purchased in the 1950s and 1960s, were offered by park staff. In 1989, U.S. Representative Charles Bennett negotiated the creation of the Timucuan Ecological and Historical Preserve, which would include national, state, and city properties and parks. As part of the negotiation, the State of Florida purchased Fort George Island to be used as a state park, but transferred Kingsley Plantation to the National Park Service.
Kingsley Plantation in 1953
River side of the Zephaniah Kingsley house at the Kingsley Plantation State Park on Fort George Island in Jacksonville, Florida in 1953. Photo: State Archives of Florida, Florida Memory, http://floridamemory.com/items/show/30193


Dr. Johnnetta Cole, Kingsley Descendant

Johnnetta Cole at Kingsley Plantation
The very wise and inspirational Dr. Johnnetta Cole, descendant of Ana and Zephaniah Kingsley, and her companion, at the 2005 Kingsley Heritage Celebration. Click here to learn more about Dr. Cole. Photo by Benjamin Huber.

Monday, June 15, 2015

Me and Peri at Kingsley Plantation

Emanuel Kingsley and Peri Frances at Kingsley Plantation, built circa 1798.
Emanuel Kingsley and Peri Frances, descendants of Zephaniah and Ana Kingsley from different lines, on the grounds of Kingsley Plantation during the Kingsley Heritage Celebration in 2006. Photo copyright NPS.

The First Kingsley Heritage Celebration and Kingsley Family Reunion

Kingsley Heritage Celebration 1998
The Kingsley family on the steps of their ancestral home.
Photo: NPS, 1998.
This is a portrait of the first reunion Kingsley family reunion, held during the fist Kingsley Heritage Celebration in 1998 at Kingsley Plantation, Fort George Island, Florida. The lady (a Kingsley descendant of the Gibbs line I believe, and obviously the family matriarch) who is next to my mother (who's blocking the sun with her hands), on the fourth step up wearing a white dress (my face is partly visible right behind her), kindly brought amazing home cooked fried chicken and biscuits, which we all enjoyed as a picnic on the grounds of the Plantation. You haven't tasted fried chicken until you have Southern home made fried chicken, and from a Kingsley to boot ;)

That night the same lady along with our other Kingsley "cousins" invited us for dinner at the historic Florida House Inn on Amelia Island. It was an amazing evening in an amazing place, one which I will never forget. My paternal grandmother (not on the Kingsley side) belonged to the first Dominican protestant church (a minority in a Catholic country, especially before the spread of storefront protestant groups) and though she spoke not a word of English, she and the senior Gibbs folks sang along to old Presbyterian church hymns, each in their language, as grandma knew the melodies but with the Spanish lyrics. Unfortunately I have not seen pictures of that dinner, nor do I remember if any were taken...

For more on the history of the Kingsley Heritage Celebration, click here.