Cane grinding at Dudley Farm complex | Cane grinding at Dudley Farm complex | Still Image | Farmers Farm buildings Farm life Farm workers Sugarcane Sugarcane grinding Agriculture Material culture Family farming Cash crops Sugar crops Architecture Food industry and trade Structures Cane syrup Food preparation | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Cane grinding at Dudley Farm complex
- Date
- 1989-11
- Description
- Ninety-seven color slides. Images of cane grinding at the Dudley Farms complex. Today a state park, Dudley Farms had been used as the Dudley family farm since the 1840s. Donated to the state in 1984 by Myrtle Dudley, the Bureau of Florida Folklife was contracted by the Florida Park Service to survey the sugarcane grinding complex at the farms. The final result, as a report of the findings,is available in S 1597.
- Collection
Citrus harvesters at work | Citrus harvesters at work | Still Image | Harvesting Trees Farm workers Occupational groups Labor Farming Farm life Agriculture Cash crops Fruit Oranges Citrus fruit industry Orange industry | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Citrus harvesters at work
- Date
- Description
- One black and white print. Karl Holland was the photographer for the Florida Dept. of Commerce.
- Collection
Farmer T.G. Mayo demonstrating sugarcane grinding to students | Farmer T.G. Mayo demonstrating sugarcane grinding to students | Still Image | Farmer Students Food preparation Agriculture Tools Demonstrations Farmers Sugarcane grinding Sugar Sugarcane Farming Education Sugar crops Cash crops Agricultural implements | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Harvesting sugarcane | Harvesting sugarcane | Still Image | Fieldwork African Americans Sugar crops Sugarcane Sugar Farm life Agriculture Agricultural implements Knives Labor Occupational groups Plants Cash crops Farm workers | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Harvesting sugarcane
- Date
- 1983
- Description
- Seventy-four color slides. Images of sugarcane harvesting in Clewiston. Shows cutting sugar cane stalks, burning cane fields, turning used stalks into mulch, tools used, and sugar processing plants. Slides 1-20 are duplicated in slides 21-40; and slides 41-57 are duplictaed in slides 58-74.
- Collection
Harvesting sugarcane with tractor | Harvesting sugarcane with tractor | Still Image | Sugar Sugar crops Sugarcane Tractors Machinery African Americans Agriculture Farming Cash crops Farm workers | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Helicopter sugarcane crop sprayer | Helicopter sugarcane crop sprayer | Still Image | Farm workers Fieldwork Farming Sugar crops Agriculture Sugarcane Machinery Cash crops Farms Helicopters Spraying Aerial spraying and dusting in agriculture Helicopter pilots | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Helicopter sugarcane crop sprayer
- Date
- 1987-10
- Description
- Six color slides. Images of a helicopter crop sprayer for sugarcane, piloted by Justin Brown. The Folk Arts in Education Project in Palm Beach County was a joint venture between the Palm Beach County School System and the Florida Folklife Program. It was conducted between 1986 and 1987 by folklorist Jan Rosenberg with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts to add to existing social studies curriculum. The goal was to impart an appreciation of multi-ethnic traditions and provide a sense of place to the mobile student population. The project focused on the Florida Studies component for fourth grade students. The project consisted of field research to identify local traditions and folk artists, a series of five two-day seminars to acquaint teachers with the use of folklore and folk arts, in-school programs conducted by a folklorist and traditionalist, which included visits by local folk artists. In total, the project involved 15 schools with 779 students.
- Collection
Images of the 1983 Florida Folk Festival | Images of the 1983 Florida Folk Festival | Still Image | Dancers Healers Herbalists Basket maker Quiltmakers Farmers Festivals Folk festivals Folklore revival festivals Special events Performing arts Quilted goods Quilting Needlework Tobacco Flora Cash crops Herbs Demonstrations Quilts African Americans Baskets | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Images of the 1983 Florida Folk Festival
- Date
- 1983-05
- Description
- One proof sheet with 35 black and white images (plus negatives). Includes images of tobacco drying, Scaff and Estelle McGauley quilting, Newsome and Poole demonstrating herbal healing, Bullard and Stormant demonstrating tobacco farming, and Jennings & Clark with their white oak baskets.
- Collection
Picking peanuts | Picking peanuts | Still Image | Farming African Americans Farm life Crops Seed crops Cash crops Land use Family farming Plants Farmers | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Picking peanuts
- Date
- 1980-12-12
- Description
- Four black and white prints. Aaron Yulee and his wife (unidentified). The Yulees were friends of Lucreaty Clark.
- Collection
Picking peanuts | Picking peanuts | Still Image | Crops Cash crops Plants Harvesting Agriculture Farm life Farming African Americans Land use Family farming | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Picking peanuts
- Date
- 1980-12-12
- Description
- One black and white print. Duplicated in S 1577, Box 17, folder 86.
- Collection
Sugar cane fields burning | Sugar cane fields burning | Still Image | Fieldwork Burning of land Agriculture Farming Sugar Sugar crops Sugarcane Cash crops Plants Flora Fire Smoke | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Sugar cane fields burning
- Date
- 1986-11-08
- Description
- Twenty-five color slides. Burning sugar cane fields on Osceola Farms. The Folk Arts in Education Project in Palm Beach County was a joint venture between the Palm Beach County School System and the Florida Folklife Program. It was conducted between 1986 and 1987 by folklorist Jan Rosenberg with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts to add to existing social studies curriculum. The goal was to impart an appreciation of multi-ethnic traditions and provide a sense of place to the mobile student population. The project focused on the Florida Studies component for fourth grade students. The project consisted of field research to identify local traditions and folk artists, a series of five two-day seminars to acquaint teachers with the use of folklore and folk arts, in-school programs conducted by a folklorist and traditionalist, which included visits by local folk artists. In total, the project involved 15 schools with 779 students.
- Collection