2022 First Coast Relocation Guide

Page 148

MOSH, photo courtesy of COJ

DUVAL-WEST Camp Milton Historic Preserve 1175 Halsema Rd. N., Jacksonville www.timucuanparks.org/camp-miltonhistoric-preserve This campground immerses visitors into the Civil War era with its historical reenactments. On the property is an authentic 1800s Florida farmstead and an education center that houses Civil War artifacts. Durkeeville Historical Society Museum 1293 W. 19th St., Jacksonville www.durkeevillehistoricalsociety.org The Durkeeville community was founded in the 1930s for African Americans during Jacksonville’s period of racial segregation. This museum tells the

Karpeles Manuscript Library Museum

Veterans Memorial Wall

101 W. 1st St., Jacksonville

1145 E. Adams St., Jacksonville

www.karpeles.com/museums/jax.php

www.coj.net/departments/military-and-

As one of the few Karpeles Museums in the country,

veterans-affairs/jacksonville-veterans-

this location on the First Coast preserves historic

memorial-wall

artwork, documents and writings from renowned

This memorial is a tribute to fallen heroes all the

authors, scientists, composers, philosophers and

way from World War I to the War on Terror. More

leaders throughout world history.

than 1,700 veterans from all military branches are

Merrill House Museum

honored.

315 A Philip Randolph Blvd., Jacksonville www.jaxhistory.org/merrill-museum-house-

A.L. Lewis Museum

Operated by the Jacksonville Historical Society, this

1600 Julia St., Fernandina Beach

unique museum portrays what life in Jacksonville

www.americanbeachmuseum.org

was like at the turn of the 20th century.

The A.L. Lewis Museum gives a glimpse into the

Museum of Southern History

artifacts.

4304 Herschel St., Jacksonville

613 W. Ashley St., Jacksonville www.clarawhitemission.org/museum The museum is a memorial to Clara White, a former slave who fed her hungry neighbors out of her

Visitors to this museum can peruse exhibits on

215 O’Hagan Ln., Fernandina Beach

military and civilian life during the Civil War. On

www.fbfl.us/474/Amelia-Island-Lighthouse-

display is a Lincoln-era 37-Star Applegate Flag and a

Tour

diorama of the Battle of Olustee.

Known to be the only surviving lighthouse from the

worked alongside her mother to provide for the

829 N. Davis St., Jacksonville

community. This was the beginning of a fully running

www.ritzjacksonville.com

mission.

This museum celebrates the period from the 1920s

www.coj.net/departments/fire-and-rescue/ fire-museum The Great Fire of 1901 wiped out most of downtown Jacksonville, destroying 2,368 buildings. The museum displays photos of the fire, as well as a restored 1902 American LaFrance horse-drawn fire engine and working 1926 American LaFrance fire engine.

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First Coast Relocation Guide™ | © Heritage Publishing, Inc.

Crow era in Amelia Island. Amelia Island Lighthouse

Ritz Theatre and Museum

1406 Gator Bowl Blvd., Jacksonville

lives of African Americans who lived during the Jim

www.museumsouthernhistory.com

two-room house in the 1880s. Her daughter, Eartha,

Jacksonville Fire Museum

NASSAU COUNTY

tours

story of Durkeeville through exhibits and historical Eartha M. M. White Museum

Amelia Island Museum of History, courtesy of AmeliaIsland.com

Territorial Period, Florida’s oldest lighthouse stands on the banks of Fernandina Beach. Built in 1838, the lighthouse continues to stand as a beacon of the area’s history.

to the 1960s in the LaVilla neighborhood, known as

Amelia Island Museum of History

the “Harlem of the South.” Visitors can also learn

233 S. 3rd St., Fernandina Beach

about Jacksonville-native brothers John Rosamond

www.ameliamuseum.org

and James Weldon Johnson who wrote the African

Known as the first “spoken history museum” in the

American National Anthem, Lift Ev’ry Voice and Sing.

state of Florida, discover Amelia Island’s diverse past at this museum.


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2022 First Coast Relocation Guide by Heritage Publishing Inc. - Issuu