Minding the Mounds: Sams House
Next on our list is the Sams House burial mound in Merritt Island. We started the trip by visiting the Brevard Museum of History and Natural Science in Cocoa. They have a fantastic exhibit of the Windover excavation and a bust of what one of the people found may have looked like when they were alive. They also feature a Mastodon and Giant Ground Sloth replica of the fossils which were discovered in Florida that inhabited this State thousands of years ago. After the museum, we made our way to Sams House and when we arrived, we went to see the 600-square-foot cabin that once housed 10 people in 1878. Sams House is Brevard County’s oldest standing home.
In 1875 the cabin was taken apart and floated up the Indian Lagoon River to be reassembled where it is today. In 1888, they built the larger white house that is next to it and tore down the previous three rooms in the cabin into one spacious room. Afterward, it would have been used as a school than a church for the people that colonized the area. There is a rock path that stretches around 300 feet from the house that leads you to the burial mound that was partially excavated in 1895.
Sources:
Mitchem, Jeffrey M. “The East Florida Expeditions of
Clarence Bloomfield Moore.” East Florida Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Mo -
University of Alabama Press, http://www.uapress.ua.edu/product/East-Florida-Expeditions-of-Clarence-Bloomfield-Mo,973.aspx.
Mitchem, Jeffrey M. “Clarence Bloomfield Moore
(1852–1936).” Encyclopedia
of Arkansas, 15
Oct. 2019, https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/clarence-bloomfield-moore-574/.
Photos and text by Julie-Marie Alvarez