Early Florida Village
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Early Florida Village


The Early Florida Village is a unique opportunity to step back in time to see Clay County life in the years past. During the fair each exhibit is live with demonstrators dressed in the era to provide guests with a live experience of how life was in Early Florida. Food samples, shade trees and sitting areas make the live history experience a real enjoyable treat. This is also home to our Little Red Barn, which features baby farm animals!


The Early Florida Village is open each day of the fair until 7:00 PM, with limited demonstrations on most days.

Trapper Shack

Saw Mill

Padgett House

Log Splitting

Honey House

Lee Henry Heritage Garden

Corn Crib

Cane Syrup

Baxley House

Soap Making

Little Red Barn

Shared Outhouse

Johns House - Quilt Making

Hay Baler

Duck Pond

Maguire Commissary

Straw Broom Making

Crosscut Saw

Penney Farms School House

June Reinhold Myers Pavilion

Moonshine Still

Penney Farms Jail House

General Store

Cracker House

Replica Vintage Country Church

Blacksmith

Bull Whip Making


The Early Florida Village is a unique opportunity to step back in time to see Clay County life in the years past. During the fair each exhibit is live with demonstrators dressed in the era to provide guests with a live experience of how life was in Early Florida. Food samples, shade trees and sitting areas make the live history experience a real enjoyable treat. This is also home to our Little Red Barn, which features baby farm animals!


The Early Florida Village is open each day of the fair until 7:00 PM, with limited demonstrations on most days.

Exhibits

 CORN CRIB (Unknown Era)

CORN CRIB (Unknown Era)

This corn crib, donated by the Freddie C. Geiger Family in Hillard, Fl., was located on the farm of Mr. Geiger near Hillard. This corn crib is typical of the type of structure used during the l800's and early l900's on numerous farms throughout Florida. Its purpose was simple: a place to store field corn after the harvest and to protect it from being eaten by wild animals such as deer and wild hogs. From this crib, the corn was fed out to cattle during the cold winter months when grass was not available. The logs in the Corn Crib were hand cut and hewn by Mr. Geiger, probably from available timber on his farm. Notice the split rail fencing surrounding the Heritage Garden. This fence was also donated by the family of Mr. Freddie C. Geiger. It too was from his farm in Hillard, and the rails were also cut and hewn by Mr. Geiger from available timber. This style of fencing was most often used to enclose "barnyard animals" such as milk cows and work horses.
BAXLEY HOUSE (Circa 1940s)

BAXLEY HOUSE (Circa 1940s)

The Baxley House was moved from its original location to the village and serves as a central meeting place during the fair for Clay County families and friends. This building was actually the office at the saw mill which was owned by the Baxley Family back in 1926. Today you’ll find country wood-stove cooking demonstrations and tasty down-home southern country cooking by the kitchen crew led by Ellen Maddox and a group of dedicated volunteers. Menu includes collard greens, black-eyed peas, corn bread and well-kept family secret recipe desserts
HONEY HOUSE (2009)

HONEY HOUSE (2009)

In 2008, the Honey House was constructed as a replica of a typical turn-of-the-century honey extraction house. It features large shuttered windows, a high ceiling, and a large front porch for storing honey A supers' as they were processed. Visitors to the exhibit can view a glass encased, living hive of honeybees and see the bees in action producing honey and caring for their young. This hive opens to the back of the building to allow worker bees access to come and go. One can search for the Queen Bee among her thousands of attendants. The exhibit displays beekeeping equipment from the past as well as examples of what is used today in the beekeeping industry. On hand in the Honey House are local beekeepers who will greet and explain to visitors the story of how important honeybees are to the survival of Florida Agriculture and the food we eat.Honeybees were not native to the United States. They were brought across the Atlantic Ocean by the early European settlers.
JUNE REINHOLD MYERS ALL-PURPOSE PAVILION (2008)

JUNE REINHOLD MYERS ALL-PURPOSE PAVILION (2008)

Located next to the Syrup House, this Pavilion was dedicated in honor of June Reinhold Myers. Sit in the shade, enjoy your ice cream and listen to the music that provided our early pioneers with relaxation and entertainment. (See entertainment schedule on this website for times and performances of Bluegrass Bands).
MAGUIRE COMMISSARY (Circa 1920s)

MAGUIRE COMMISSARY (Circa 1920s)

The timber industry was the “economic engine” for North Florida during the 1800’s and most of the 1900’s. Dedicated in honor of Elliott Maguire in 2008, this “Company” store was typical of the buildings necessary to support the turpentine and pulpwood industry. Open for tours, this building displays tools and artifacts related to the timber industry.
MOONSHINE EXHIBIT

MOONSHINE EXHIBIT

Moon-shining was an activity that provided income during times of need. This actual still was used during the era of the Great Depression. Listen to stories of how this “illegal” product was manufactured. Sorry… in this exhibit there will be neither demonstrations nor free samples.
PADGETT LOG CABIN (Circa 1940s)

PADGETT LOG CABIN (Circa 1940s)

The Padgett House was built by Hardy and Vinnie Padgett on the North Prong of Black Creek in the early l940's in the Clay Hill area of Clay County. Prior to building this log house, all of Hardy and Vinnie's ten children had left home and had families of their own. The house was later acquired by their eldest child, Hiram Padgett. Hiram and his wife Tinnie dismantled the house and moved it by log truck about two miles to a location on what is now CR218, just west of the North Prong Black Creek Bridge. This was done in about l946 or 47. There were five children of the Hiram Padgett Family raised in this house. In l969, the house was replaced by a modern structure and moved to a field further from the highway. In l992, Ms. Sarah Boe, on behalf of the Clay County Fair Association, was able to acquire the house for display in the Rediscover Early Florida Village.
PENNEY FARMS JAIL HOUSE (Circa 1926)

PENNEY FARMS JAIL HOUSE (Circa 1926)

See the cells where inmates were lodged in the early days of the Town of Penney Farms. History reveals that two robbers were caught and occupied one cell overnight and on another occasion, a teenage prankster learned a lesson that lasted a lifetime inside this jail.
PENNEY FARMS SCHOOL HOUSE (Circa 1950s)

PENNEY FARMS SCHOOL HOUSE (Circa 1950s)

This 1st & 2nd grade classroom was once attached to the original “main” three-room Penney Farms School. Today with the aid of dedicated volunteers from the Historical Societies of clay County, the village attempts to show the importance of education in the history of Clay County.
 LITTLE RED BARN (Circa 1940s)

LITTLE RED BARN (Circa 1940s)

Every farm needs a barn. Come visit the duck pond, and all of the baby animals that live in the Little Red Barn. We have baby goats, chics, rabbits, pigs, calves, ponies, and more! Come touch, learn and interact with our farmers and animals!
REPLICA VINTAGE COUNTRY CHURCH (2004)

REPLICA VINTAGE COUNTRY CHURCH (2004)

The Village Church was the center of spiritual and social life in every small community. Visit our replica of a rural country church and enjoy Gospel music performed by local church choirs.
THE SHARED OUTHOUSE

THE SHARED OUTHOUSE

In the early days of no indoor plumbing, the “outhouse” was a necessary structure
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