Walk the last intact antebellum plantation in Florida — a haunting, UNESCO-recognised National Monument on Fort George Island where the stories of enslaved Africans, a remarkable free Black plantation mistress, and early American power collide.
What to expect
Fort George Island is reached by a short, scenic ferry or drive across the St. Johns River. Your private guide brings the 19th-century world of Zephaniah Kingsley and his wife Anna Madgigine Jai — a formerly enslaved Senegalese woman who became a landowner in her own right — vividly to life. Explore the circle of original tabby-shell slave cabins, the plantation house, and the sweeping riverfront that once connected this estate to the Atlantic trade routes. The surrounding Timucuan Preserve adds bald cypress hammocks and shore birds to the backdrop.
Good to know
About 25 miles northeast of the cruise terminal; allow 4–5 hours total. The site can be warm and exposed — hat, water, and comfortable walking shoes are essential. Arrange a licensed private guide in advance through ToursbyLocals or a Jacksonville concierge service.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Jacksonville — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.