Resistance, Resilience, and “Struggle for Survival: 1817-1858”
This week, revisit one of the most powerful exhibits ever showcased at the Ah-Tah-Thi-Ki Museum: Struggle for Survival: 1817-1858.
Lost and Found: Reclaiming Fort Shackleford
This week, we are looking at the reclaiming of Fort Shackleford. A Seminole War period fort, Fort Shackleford was located on the now Big Cypress Reservation.
A Journey Through Payne’s Prairie
Welcome back to our Seminole Spaces series! In this series, we explore places and spaces important to Seminole culture, history, and tourism. Last week, we talked about Seminole Cowkeepers, and learned a bit about the legendary Seminole Cowkeeper Ahaya. Ahaya amassed nearly ten thousand head of cattle, and drove them on the Alachua savanna near Gainesville by 1775. But, how did this Alachuan savanna become known as Payne’s Prairie? This week, we will explore Payne’s Prairie. There, the Seminole relationship with the land, as well as the landscape itself, has shifted and changed over time. In our featured image this week, you can see a shot taken from the observation tower at the Payne’s Prairie Preserve State Park in 2022. Around 300,000 people visit the preserve annually to take in the wide grassy vistas and marshy woodlands. Home to hundreds of species of birds, fish, alligators, and even bison, Payne’s Prairie