Filed Under Story

Our Land: Indigenous Northeast Florida

Panel 1

Jacksonville’s past includes a deep Indigenous history. Beginning more than 10,000 years ago, small family bands occasionally moved through the area. By 5000 years ago, Native populations started living permanently near the Atlantic coast. Contrary to the myth of an unchanging Native American past, migrations, contact with outsiders, long distance interactions, and technological innovations shaped the precontact history of Northeast Florida. Drawing on archaeological and historical evidence, the story presented here begins 1000 years ago and continues to the present day.

Images

"A Mocama Town" A painting that depicts Mocama people engaging in everyday town activities. Source: Warren Anderson, Public Trust Environmental Legal Institute of Florida Creator: John Robak
Our Land: Indigenous Northeast Florida Panel This panel provides an introduction to the overall scope of the exhibit. Source: Department of History and Department of Anthropology, University of North Florida Creator: Dr. Denise Bossy, Dr. Keith Ashley, and University of North Florida students. Date: 2020

Metadata

“Our Land: Indigenous Northeast Florida,” Indigenous Florida, accessed October 16, 2024, https://indigenousflorida.domains.unf.edu/items/show/69.