"Whitehead, a wealthy New York attorney and avid sportsman,
recounts an 1830s hunting expedition to Florida in this captivating
reissue of a volume originally published in 1860. Whitehead
recounts bear and turkey hunts, a panther that is caught in a pig
pen, an Indian attack on a lighthouse, and various encounters with
Florida pioneers. A vivid and, according to biologist Lovett
Williams who provides the introduction, largely accurate depiction
of a long-vanished Florida. "--"Tampa Tribune-Times"
Brought to the attention of UPF by the late Archie Carr, this
sportsman's memoir of the Florida peninsula in the nineteenth
century is a series of charming tales about hunting expeditions
along the cracker frontier.
The Florida peninsula in the 1830s was covered by flatwoods,
swamps of giant cypress, and hammocks of cabbage palm and live oak
trees. The land teemed with panther, black bear, wild hogs, and
white ibis. Writing with clarity and elegance, Whitehead weaves his
descriptions of this landscape into an old-fashioned, hair-raising
adventure story. One strand relates the affairs of an extended
hunting expedition; the other stand consists of the anecdotes told
by the main characters around the campfires in the evenings. The
hunting and fishing practices of natives in the area, principally
Seminoles, and a few rugged pioneers enhance the historical
detail.
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