Chemonie Plantation

Chemonie Plantation was a forced-labor farm of 1,840 acres (740 ha) in northern Leon County, Florida, United States, established by Hector Braden.

By 1860, 64 enslaved people worked the land, which was primarily used to produce cotton as a cash crop.

Adjacent plantations: The Leon County Florida 1860 Agricultural Census shows that the Chemonie Plantation had the following: Around 1945, David S. Ingalls, a director of Pan Am World Airways and publisher of Cincinnati Times-Star with Robert Livingston Ireland, Jr. an executive with M.A.

Hanna Company, a coal company, purchased Chemonie Plantation, a quail hunting plantation, which became part of the Ireland-Ingalls ownership, a joint business concern.

Aside from quail, Chemonie shared 1,000 acres (400 ha) of land in corn production.

Location of Chemonie Plantation