THE WHITE HOUSE / PLEASANTS WOODSON WHITE
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Coinseekers
N 30° 35.466 W 084° 34.570
16R E 732408 N 3386789
Located on W. King St. at Madison St.(S.R. 65)
Waymark Code: WM75CC
Location: Florida, United States
Date Posted: 09/04/2009
Published By:Groundspeak Charter Member paintfiction
Views: 21

This house was constructed during the early 1840's for Joseph Leonard Smallwood. At that time, it was a one and one-half story structure. In 1849, Pleasants Woodson White married Smallwood's niece, Emily, and purchased the property. He had the house enlarged in 1856; it was remodeled in the Classical Revival style at the same time. The house is an excellent example of the style. Its matching porticos supported by Doric columns give it a dignified balance. The Whites were an active Quincy family. P.W. White served the Confederacy as Chief Commissary Officer for Florida and was politically active after the Civil War. Emily White organized and served as president of the Ladies Aid Society during the war, nursing and providing necessities to wounded soldiers. She was also involved in Methodist Church activities. The house, which was the White family home until 1921, has since served as the parsonage of Centenary Methodist Church. The White House was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on February 16, 1973. White was born in Georgia in 1820, the son of a Methodist minister who soon moved his family to Quincy. Young White studied at Emory and began practicing law in Quincy in 1848. He was commissioned a major in the Confederate Army in 1861 and, as Chief Commissary Officer for Florida, commanded the important depot at Quincy. In 1863, despite his attempts at secrecy, White's difficulties in supplying beef cattle to the army became known. The shortages thus revealed influenced the military campaign of 1864. White became active in politics after the war and served as Judge of the Second Judicial Circuit, 1869-79. He also served as Commissioner of Lands and Immigration from 1881 to 1885, a period of railroad expansion in which his office was deeply involved. He became an attorney for the Florida Coast Line Canal and transport Company, which controlled vast acreage near Miami. White became an ardent booster of the South Florida climate and divided his last years between his citrus groves in Lemon city and his civic and business interests in Quincy. He died in 1919.
Marker Number: F-288

Date: 1978

County: Gadsden

Marker Type: Roadside

Sponsored or placed by: Centenary United Methodist Church in cooperation with Department of State

Website: Not listed

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Recent Visits/Logs:
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Marine Biologist visited THE WHITE HOUSE / PLEASANTS WOODSON WHITE 06/11/2011 Marine Biologist visited it
Markerman62 visited THE WHITE HOUSE / PLEASANTS WOODSON WHITE 06/12/2010 Markerman62 visited it
dimples1 visited THE WHITE HOUSE / PLEASANTS WOODSON WHITE 09/13/2009 dimples1 visited it

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