Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Newsday Tuesday - Preserving Our Local History







 When NRPA recently announced its call for applications for its Fund Your Park initiative, I immediately began to wrack my brain for project ideas. Shade structures, playgrounds, Fitness Zones…what would be the best project?! As I mulled through all our project ideas, I realized that each of these projects had their niche audience. Families would love a playground, fitness gurus a Fitness Zone, dog lovers a dog park. But I wanted something that had nearly no ‘demographic’ – something for everyone. That’s when I decided we had to choose a park that had a shared story – a story of our home and how it came to be.

Aside from National Historic Parks and Monuments like Antietam or Gettysburg, most of us don’t spend too much time thinking about the history of a park. In most cases, parks are the result of available land and the all important public demand. Despite the fact that outdoor recreation and park facilities are highly sought after by residential developers and home buyers, and the fact that many of us spend large quantities of our free time frequenting parks, very few of us really take the time to ponder the significance of a park. They are fixtures in our community. Something we expect to see, and something that we might not take the time to really appreciate – like, say, electricity. (Seriously, how often do you stop and think, “Man, I’m so glad the lights are on,” ?)  You might be surprised just how significant some of our ‘everyday’ parks.

The DuBois Family on the porch of the Pioneer Home early 1900s
DuBois Park is one of Palm Beach County’s most popular parks for some very obvious reasons. It’s gorgeous. Not pretty, gorgeous. Breathtaking. Stunning. Views of the Jupiter Inlet and Atlantic Ocean are picturesque.  This pristine and tranquil place is the perfect spot to get lost in your thoughts (except maybe not on a Saturday afternoon…like I said, it’s popular). Spend your afternoon swimming, snorkeling, boating, fishing, picnicking – you name it. There is one fixture that many might overlook in their zeal to access that crystal blue water – the DuBois House. The park’s namesake once lived in this wooden shingled New Jersey style home built in the late 1800s. It sits high atop a ‘hill’ with a perfect view of the water. Recently, the Department has spent countless hours renovating and rehabilitating the house in accordance with National Historic Registry standards (this house is on the registry) in an effort to get the house up and running for the general public. Yet, there is much more than what meets the eye in this little house upon the hill. In fact, County Archaeologists have actually identified this ‘hill’ to be a Native American shell midden, made of oyster shells, that was most likely built around 1000 years ago.  The DuBois midden was one of many that historians have found all along the Jupiter Inlet.  Historians also have uncovered bits of pottery and trade beads intermixed in these middens that have led many to believe that Ponce de Leon might have been in this region as well.  Harry DuBois, the pioneer that purchased this piece of land, chose to place his homestead upon the hill to protect it from rising waters and the unbridled sea (no rock walls and jetties in those days…).  Beyond the DuBois House is another often missed landmark, The Pineapple Packing House.
The Pineapple Packing House 

The funny name explains the little house’s history in a nutshell. Once used a storage shed for pineapple harvests, Harry DuBois decided he would put it on a barge and float it up the Loxahatchee River to a piece of property he’d bought along the Jupiter Inlet – now DuBois Park. The Pineapple Packing House was the home of the DuBois family while their ‘big house’ was being built and later converted back into storage. Over the years the Pineapple House was altered, added on to, and moved – and yet it still kept its name.  Finally, it made its way back to the DuBois Property, disheveled and broken down but still standing.


The view of the Jupiter Inlet from DuBois Park

The story of DuBois Park is not one that is told often enough, and I wonder how many really know just how significant this place really is. It is in this spirit, that Palm Beach County has become quite motivated to create opportunities within our parks for educational opportunities, as well as recreation. We invite you to help us in our mission to share the story of how ancient civilizations lived, how our county was settled, and how people once lived.   Plans have been drawn up that include the rehabilitation and restoration of the little shed to its historical roots, however now instead of pineapples, it will house a gallery and educational kiosk to educate the public on our local history, how the park came to be, and flora and fawna of the area.  We cannot do this project alone, and we hope that you will support us in reaching our goals.  See, we believe that the best part of parks and recreation is not based on what you get to do, it’s based on what you take away.







The National Recreation and Park Association recently kicked off a crowdfunding initiative housed on its website for local municipalities to use to leverage private donations to fund projects. The Pineapple House was chosen as one of these projects, and Palm Beach County hopes that you will join us in bringing this little piece of history into the forefront of DuBois Park.  We believe that the Pineapple House is the perfect project for an initiative such as this.  Crowdfunding is inherently based on the premise that communities have a shared interest in seeing a particular project through.  This project is more than providing a green space alongside a neighborhood, it is preserving an important link to our heritage and history – and if we don’t take part in trying to save it, no one else will.

To Help Save the Pineapple House, please visit: http://www.fundyourpark.org/campaign/detail/3669

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