The Juniper Prairie Wilderness is a protected wilderness area in the Ocala National Forest in Florida, USA.
Area description
The Juniper Prairie Wilderness was established in
1984 and covers an area of about 54
square kilometers (13,260
acres). It protects a diverse set of habitats including prairie, long leaf and sand pine scrub, marshes, subtropical palm jungles, swamp hardwoods, as well as sawgrass.
Settlement history
In the
1840's, Patrick Smith settled in the Juniper Prairie Wilderness in an area which became known as "Pats Island". Reuben Long and his family homesteaded in the area in
1872. Around the
turn of the 20th century, human population on pats Island peaked with about a dozen families. The inhabitants supported themselves through farming, hunting, fishing, and trade along the St. Johns River. Because of the poor economic conditions, most inhabitants had left the area before it became part of the Ocala National Forest in
1908. In
1935, the last inhabitants abandoned the area after a settlement history of less than 100 years.
Literary impact
The author
Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings visited the last two remaining inhabitants, Calvin and Mary Long in October
1933. She recorded the stories she was told on that occasion and other visits, which she
worked into her novel "
The Yearling" which was published in
1938 and won a
Pulitzer Prize in
1939. A
movie of the same name was made based on the novel in
1946.
References and external links
Wilderness Areas of Florida