<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">175</SPAN></span></p>
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<ANTIMG src="images/i013.jpg" width-obs="550" height-obs="377" alt="Buying Land in Florida" /></div>
<h2>BUYING LAND IN FLORIDA.</h2>
<p class="left45"><span class="smcap">May</span> 2.</p>
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<p>E have before us a neat little pile of
what we call "Palmetto letters,"—responses
to our papers from all States
in the Union. Our knowledge of geography
has really been quite brightened by the effort to
find out where all our correspondents are living.
Nothing could more mark the exceptional
severity of the recent winter than the bursts of
enthusiasm with which the tidings of flowers
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">176</SPAN></span>
and open-air freedom in Florida have come to
those struggling through snow-drifts and hail-storms
in the more ungenial parts of our Union.
Florida seems to have risen before their vision
as the hymn sings of better shores:—</p>
<div class="poem">
<p class="o1">"On Jordan's stormy banks I stand,</p>
<p class="i1">And cast a wistful eye</p>
<p>To Canaan's fair and happy land."</p>
</div>
<p>Consequently, the letters of inquiry have
come in showers. What is the price of land?
Where shall we go? How shall we get there?
&c.</p>
<p>We have before advertised you, O beloved
unknown! who write, that your letters are welcome,
ofttimes cheering, amusing, and undeniably
nice letters; yet we cannot pledge ourselves
to answer, except in the gross, and through "The
Christian Union." The last inquiry is from
three brothers, who want to settle and have
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">177</SPAN></span>
homes together at the South. They ask, "Is
there government land that can be had in Florida?"
Yes, there is a plenty of it; yet, as
Florida is the oldest settled State in the Union,
and has always been a sort of bone for which
adventurers have wrangled, the best land in it
has been probably taken up. We do not profess
to be land-agents; and we speak only for
the tract of land lying on the St. John's River,
between Mandarin and Jacksonville, when we
say that there are thousands of acres of good
land, near to a market, near to a great river on
which three or four steamboats are daily plying,
that can be had for five dollars per acre, and for
even less than that. Fine, handsome building-lots
in the neighborhood of Jacksonville are
rising in value, commanding much higher prices
than the mere productive value of the land. In
other words, men pay for advantages, for society,
for facilities afforded by settlements.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">178</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Now, for the benefit of those who are seriously
thinking of coming to Florida, we have
taken some pains to get the practical experience
of men who are now working the land, as to
what it will do. On the 2d of May, we
accepted the invitation of Col. Hardee to visit
his pioneer nursery, now in the fourth year of
its existence. Mr. Hardee is an enthusiast in
his business; and it is a department where we
are delighted to see enthusiasm. The close of
the war found him, as he said, miserably poor.
But, brave and undiscouraged, he retained his
former slaves as free laborers; took a tract of
land about a mile and a half from Jacksonville;
put up a house; cleared, planted, ploughed, and
digged: and, in the course of four years, results
are beginning to tell handsomely, as they always
do for energy and industry. He showed us
through his grounds, where every thing was
growing at the rate things do grow here in the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">179</SPAN></span>
month of May. Two things Mr. Hardee seems
to have demonstrated: first, that strawberry-culture
may be a success in Florida; and,
second, that certain varieties of Northern apples
and pears may be raised here. We arrived in
Florida in the middle of January; and one of
the party who spent a night at the St. James
was surprised by seeing a peck of fresh, ripe
strawberries brought in. They were from Mr.
Hardee's nursery, and grown in the open air;
and he informed us that they had, during all the
winter, a daily supply of the fruit, sufficient for a
large family, and a considerable overplus for the
market. The month of May, however, is the
height of the season; and they were picking,
they informed us, at the rate of eighty quarts
per day.</p>
<p>In regard to apples and pears, Mr. Hardee's
method is to graft them upon the native hawthorn;
and the results are really quite wonderful.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">180</SPAN></span>
Mr. Hardee was so complaisant as to cut
and present to us a handsome cluster of red
Astrachan apples about the size of large hickory nuts,
the result of the second year from the graft.
Several varieties of pears had made a truly
astonishing growth, and promise to fruit, in time,
abundantly. A large peach-orchard presented
a show of peaches, some of the size of a butternut,
and some of a walnut. Concerning one
which he called the Japan peach, he had sanguine
hope of ripe fruit in ten days. We were
not absolute in the faith as to the exact date,
but believe that there will undoubtedly be ripe
peaches there before the month of May is out.
Mr. Hardee is particularly in favor of cultivating
fruit in partially-shaded ground. Most of these
growths we speak of were under the shade of
large live-oaks; but when he took us into the
wild forest, and showed us peach, orange, and
lemon trees set to struggle for existence on the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181">181</SPAN></span>
same footing, and with only the same advantages,
as the wild denizens of the forest, we rather
demurred. Was not this pushing theory to extremes?
Time will show.</p>
<p>Col. Hardee has two or three native seedling
peaches grown in Florida, of which he speaks
highly,—Mrs. Thompson's Golden Free, which
commences ripening in June, and continues till
the first of August; the "Cracker Cart," very
large, weighing sometimes thirteen ounces; the
Cling Yellow; and the Japan, very small and
sweet, ripening in May.</p>
<p>Besides these, Mr. Hardee has experimented
largely in vines, in which he gives preference to
the Isabella, Hartford Prolific, and Concord.</p>
<p>He is also giving attention to roses and ornamental
shrubbery. What makes the inception
of such nurseries as Mr. Hardee's a matter of
congratulation is that they furnish to purchasers
things that have been proved suited to the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182">182</SPAN></span>
climate and soil of Florida. Peach-trees, roses,
and grapes, sent from the North, bring here the
habit of their Northern growth, which often
makes them worthless. With a singular stubbornness,
they adhere to the times and seasons
to which they have been accustomed farther
North. We set a peach-orchard of some four
hundred trees which we obtained from a nursery
in Georgia. We suspect now, that, having a
press of orders, our nurseryman simply sent us
a packet of trees from some Northern nursery.
The consequence is, that year after year, when
all nature about them is bursting into leaf and
blossom, when peaches of good size gem the
boughs of Florida trees, our peach-orchard
stands sullen and leafless; nor will it start bud or
blossom till the time for peaches to start in New
York. The same has been our trouble with
some fine varieties of roses which we took
from our Northern grounds. As yet, they are
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183">183</SPAN></span>
hardly worth the ground they occupy; and
whether they ever will do any thing is a matter
of doubt. Meanwhile we have only to ride a
little way into the pine-woods to see around
many a rustic cabin a perfect blaze of crimson
roses and cluster roses, foaming over the fences
in cascades of flowers. These are Florida roses,
born and bred; and this is the way they do with
not one tithe of the work and care that we have
expended on our poor Northern exiles. Mr.
Hardee, therefore, in attempting the pioneer
nursery of Florida, is doing a good thing for
every new-comer; and we wish him all success.
As a parting present, we received a fine summer
squash, which, for the first of May, one must
admit is good growth. And now, for the benefit
of those who may want to take up land in
Florida, we shall give the experience of some
friends and neighbors of ours who have carried
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_184" id="Page_184">184</SPAN></span>
through about as thorough and well-conducted
an experiment as any; and we give it from memoranda
which they have kindly furnished, in the
hope of being of use to other settlers.
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