Historical Marker dedicated to the Timuquan Indian Mound
- Description: This historical marker reads: " Timuquan Indian Mound. Near this site on the shore of the bay, once stood a large Timuquan Temple Mound dating before the time of Christ. It was 50 feet in height with a large level space on top where elaborately decorated temples and residences of Indian chiefs and shamans stood. The Fort Brooke soldiers, in the 1840's, used a tall Gumbo Limbo tree growing at the crest of the city-block long mound as a lookout post. The ladies of the post enjoyed ice cream parties at the summit in a beautiful Chinese pavilion. After the Army withdrew in 1882, the mound was razed to fill the Jackson Street ditch which extended from Marion Street to the river." (Timuquanian Society, INC. and the Tampa Historical Society)
- Keywords: Timuquan Indian Mound, downtown, Tampa, Florida, historical marker
- TIFF File: A high resolution TIFF of Historical Marker dedicated to the Timuquan Indian Mound (19.9 Mb) is available for download. This is a very large file suitable for printing. For most on-screen purposes, you should use the image displayed on this page instead of this TIFF.
- Source: Florida Center for Instructional Technology, Exploring Florida: Social Studies Resources
for Students and Teachers (Tampa, FL: University of South Florida, 2009)
- County: Hillsborough
- Location:
- Date of Photo: 1/7/2006
- Photographer: Roy Winkelman