Bulow Plantation Ruins Historic State Park

The 150 acres of Bulow Plantation Ruins stand as a monument to the rise and fall of sugar plantations in East Florida. In the early 1800s, the Bulow family grew sugar cane, cotton, rice, and indigo and became prosperous. In 1836, during the Second Seminole War, Seminoles burned the plantation, effectively destroying it. The Bulow family did not rebuild it. Ruins of the former plantation, a sugar mill, a unique spring house, several wells and the crumbling foundations of the plantation house and slave cabins show how volatile the Florida frontier was in the early 19th century. Today, a scenic walking trail leads visitors to the sugar mill ruins, listed on the National Register of Historic Sites, and a park interpretive center tells the plantation's history

Bulow Plantation Ruins is located three miles west of Flagler Beach on County Road 2001 between State Road 100 and Old Dixie Highway.

Information Provided by the Florida Department of State.