Long before modern communities were established here in the Flagler area, the prosperous Bulow Plantation known as BulowVille once stood in what is today Bulow Plantation Ruins Historic State Park.
Visit Bulow Plantation where you will find the charred, weathered, mossy coquina rock ruins of the Bulow Plantation sugar mill and engine house. Bulow Plantation grew and processed sugar cane, cotton, rice and indigo, and was known to be the largest sugar plantation in east Florida.
In 1835, the Second Seminole War began when troops from the United States came to Florida to enforce a treaty that would require Seminoles to give up their land and move west. The Seminoles responded by attacking plantations where troops often were stationed.
In early 1836, the Seminoles burned BulowVille along with other plantations in the area.
All that is left today are the coquina ruins of the sugar mill, several wells, a spring house, boat slips, the crumbling foundation of the mansion and slave cabins. The scorched Bulow Plantation sugar mill ruins are a testament to the east Florida plantation economy and the unstable era of the Second Seminole War.
Today, the standing ruin walls and chimneys may be reached by a one-way loop drive or a scenic walking trail that leads visitors to the mill site.
At the sugar mill ruins you will find interpretive signs along the paved walkway in and around the coquina walls.
An interpretive center displays artifacts and tells the story of Bulow Plantation and the turbulent events that led to its destruction.