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There are about 100 head of cattle in this herd.
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There are several lakes in the valley. The road winds around the lakes.
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The oak-shaded road leads to the cemetery.
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On a hill just west of the Village of Bagdad, Florida in Northwest Florida, in the middle of mighty live oaks, rest the people who created, with their own bare hands, notably the largest economic concerns in the State of Florida at the turn of the 20th Century.
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There is a three mile length of winding road through this section of the forest.
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The road descends into a low lying area surrounding Coldwater Creek. The stables and recreational area are located on the south side of the creek.
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Coldwater Creek runs through the park.
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The Victorian mansion was built in 1904.
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The home is constructed entirely of heart pine wood.
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Columns that are as wide as many of the surrounding trees flank the front door with its heavy beveled glass insets that have rippled under the weight of years. The spacious interior contains 18 rooms.
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There are 6 bedrooms, 4 baths, 12 fireplaces, office, parlor, study, living, dining, kitchen, utility room, and third-floor ballroom in the 7500 square foot house.
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The mansion was built by one of the owners of the Alger Sullivan lumber mill.
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The sheltered portico is attached to the west side of the house.
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At the beginning of the 20th century, Century, Florida was the nation's leading producer of Southern pine timber.
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Pecan orchards flank the house in three directions.
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A long entrance road leads up a hill to the three-story mansion.
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A row of crape myrtle trees line the driveway.
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The property is located on Highway 4A.
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The stable and pump house are located adjacent to the carriage house in the rear of the property.
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The back of the main house can be seen in the left side of the photograph.
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The water was pumped from an artisan spring to the house.
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There are many old hardwood trees on the property, such as the oak pictured above.
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The lake is approximately eight acres.
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The lake is decked on the east side with concrete.
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A man-made waterfall functions as the spillway for the lake.
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The rocks that form the waterfalls were brought from the old lumber mill.
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Tannenheim is German for fir tree house.
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The lake is surrounded by mature oaks and native hardwoods.
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The front of the farm faces Kleinschmidt Road. The deciduous trees are pecans. There is a grove along the property line on the east side of the farm. The Heil home is a small craftsman cottage in the center of the frame.
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Much of the produce in the area is grown in the Elberta farm community.
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A stand of long-leaf pines and slash pines create a picturesque view of pasture land along this country road.
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The dirt road and the farmland are barely distinguishable.
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Pecan trees line the road. There are numerous old orchards on this flat plain.
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The narrow dirt road runs alongside fields of vegetables
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Highway 178 bisects the Holland fields. A 5 acre tilled area on the north side of the road is prepared for the next crop.
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The entrance to the barn and house is on the far right of the photograph. The 5 acre tilled field can be seen on the other side of the road.
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Homer Holland Road is accessed from Highway 178. It runs alongside of the Holland barn and home. The trees are deciduous water oaks and sweet gums.
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The Holland farmhouse can be seen through the trees. The driveway is typical of dirt roads and driveways which are composed of red clay.
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The Holland family settled the area over 100 years ago. Bruce Holland is a well known farmer who sells produce at his barn on Hwy 178. His farm has been featured on the WEAR TV 3 feature "Our Acre".
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The church is located at the corner of Chumukla Highway and 178.
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Mature pecan trees flank cotton fields on both sides of the road for several miles.
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There are interesting old signs on the green barn.
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Womack Road is about three miles north of the town of Milton in Santa Rosa County.
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The road winds through a wooded area.
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There is a small restaurant about one mile from Munson Highway
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The first 1/2 mile of the road winds through a forested area.
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Oak trees form a canopy over the road.
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The term hammock is applied to an area characterized by a diverse collection of bother deciduous and evergreen hardwood trees.
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The store is located on the northeast corner of the intersection of Highway 4 and the Munson Highway.
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The farmhouse has a pyramidal roof and front porch indicative of the four-square Georgian Victorian style.
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Pecan trees divide the homestead's driveway from the adjacent fields.
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Oak trees line the cotton field adjacent to the Escambia Grain Coop silos.
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This is the only farm cooperative grain elevator in northwest Florida.
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There are three main buildings in the complex. The office is on the left, the grain elevator is immediately behind the office building and the fertilizer house is on the right of the photograph.
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The crop is planted in late May or early June. By July the plants will shade out the center of the row before blooming.
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The 60 acre field is located on Highway 97 in the Walnut Hill community.
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There are several dairy farms along Kansas Road.
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There are catfish ponds on both sides of the dirt road.
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The pond is the foreground is one of many catfish ponds in the area. There are over 1,000 such ponds in the neighborhood.
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All of the land fronting on Kansas Road is under cultivation as row crops or in use as pasture land.
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There are cotton fields stretching for several miles on both sides of Kansas Road.
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Mennonite farmers are making agriculture a viable way of life in Escambia County.
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The farm is located at the intertection of Morgan and Arthur Brown Road.
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