Turpentine Industry Community and Family
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Marine Biologist
N 29° 43.573 W 082° 15.309
17R E 378607 N 3289108
This historical marker is located just outside the Fairbanks Cemetery, a small cemetery located along Highway 24 (Waldo Road) in Fairbanks, Florida.
Waymark Code: WMC5P5
Location: Florida, United States
Date Posted: 07/28/2011
Published By:Groundspeak Charter Member paintfiction
Views: 13

The most prominent and unusual headstone in the Fairbanks Cemetery is for Ellis Mize, whose headstone is a pine tree-shaped monument on the granite pedestal. On the pedestal is an etching of a mule and cart and workmen gathering turpentine. Attached to the pine tree portion of the monument are cups attached to gather the sap for making turpentine. The historical marker is directly in line with Ellis Mize's headstone and there's actually a paved path leading from the historical marker to the headstone.

The historical marker reads:

SIDE 1: The naval stores industry was important to maritime power worldwide. Pine tar and pitch were used to seal wooden ships and protect sails and rigging. When settlers came to America -- in Florida (1565), in Virginia (1607) and in Massachusetts (1620) -- they found vast pine forests with resinous tar and pitch, a scarce commodity for European competitors with wooden fleets. Settlers at first produced pine pitch and tar by distilling resin-soaked fat pine wood from dead tree logs, limbs and knots, covering them with soil and burning them to yield tar and charcoal. After fat pine wood became scarce, pitch was made by chopping deep cavities or "boxes" near the base of living trees to collect gum. Only crude gum was exported until simple distillation techniques separated volatile turpentine from the residual rosin poured hot into barrels for domestic use or export. During the next three hundred years, with little change, this forest product industry prospered, first in the Carolinas, then Georgia and Florida to become a major U.S. industry. Production of gum was greatly accelerated and tree life protected when the Herty clay cups, introduced in early 1900's, replaced cut boxes.

SIDE 2: From 1909 until 1923, Florida led the nation in pine gum production. In 1909, the peak year in the U.S.A. gum yielded 750,000 barrels of turpentine and 2.5 million barrels of rosin. The 1910 census listed 27,2ll men and 3l6 women, mostly blacks, working in the industry with 65 percent in Florida. Fairbanks, Florida was a turpentine still town with the Mize family operation processing ten 50-gallon barrels of crude gum at a time. This still required six crops of 10,000 faces (an area where streaks of bark are removed) and each crop covered 400 acres. As recently as 1951, 105 fire stills operated around Gainesville. The Mize family operated the Fairbanks still until 1950. Many of the buildings (the cooper's shed, machine shop and worker homes) still stand. Ellis Mize (1882-1967) donated land with a lake bearing his name to the University of Florida's forestry education program. In 1948, they deeded this private cemetery on that property to the Fairbanks Baptist Church. Because of his love for the pine tree industry, Mize had his granite tombstone carved to resemble a working face pine tree. This marker is dedicated to all who toiled to provide an income for families and communities and resinous products worldwide.
Marker Number: F-516

Date: 2004

County: Alachua

Marker Type: Roadside

Sponsored or placed by: The Florida Society of American Foresters and the Florida Department of State.

Website: Not listed

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