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Historic Plants & Land Traditions
The landscape of Leon County is more than scenery—it is a living archive. Through the Isaac Young Homestead Program and our partnership with Young Busby Farms, the Leon County Historical Society (LCHS) documents historic plants and land traditions that reflect how Black-founded communities lived, farmed, healed, and sustained cultural knowledge across generations.
This page highlights the plants we are documenting and how we use site visits, oral histories, and place-based education to preserve land-based heritage. Visitors—including schools, universities, churches, and the general public—are invited to learn how plants and soil help tell the story of settlement, survival, and legacy in Leon County’s Black rural communities.
Historic Plants & Land Traditions
A 2023 site visit identified native trees, shrubs, vines, and grasses present on the land, including Black Walnut, yaupon, sassafras, mustang grape, beautyberry, dewberry, prickly pear, and native grasses such as little bluestem.
Juglans nigra
Educational Description: Black walnut is a long-lived hardwood tree valued for its timber and its nuts, which have been used in Southern foodways for generations. In Black rural communities, walnut trees often carried cultural meaning tied to land stewardship, seasonal harvesting, and women’s knowledge traditions that connected food, wellness, and memory.
Harvest
Educational Description: Black walnuts were traditionally gathered from the land and used in baked goods, sweets, and seasonal recipes. In many families, harvesting walnuts also reflected community knowledge of land cycles—when to gather, how to cure them, and how to use them in ways passed down through generations.
albidum
Educational Description: Sassafras is a native tree known for its aromatic leaves and roots, historically used in teas and traditional Southern foodways. It is often remembered in home remedy knowledge, where plants served as everyday sources of comfort, wellness, and community care.
Ilex vomitoria
Educational Description: Yaupon is a native evergreen shrub historically brewed as a tea in the South and valued for its resilience in changing landscapes. Its presence reflects long-standing traditions of using local plants for everyday wellness and community life.
Callicarpa american
Educational Description: American beautyberry is a native shrub known for its bright purple berries and long-standing presence in Southern landscapes. It has been remembered in folk plant knowledge and is a visible marker of seasonal change and ecological richness in heritage landscapes.
Vitis mustangensis
Educational Description: Mustang grape is a native vine found throughout Texas and the South, producing grapes often used for jelly, preserves, and seasonal foods. Vines like these reflect how communities gathered and preserved what the land provided, transforming harvest into tradition.
Opuntia spp
Educational Description: Prickly pear cactus is a culturally significant Texas plant used historically for food, medicine, and survival knowledge. Its resilience symbolizes how communities adapted to harsh conditions, using land-based knowledge to sustain health and nourishment.
Rubus aboriginum
Educational Description: Dewberries are native trailing berry plants closely related to blackberries and traditionally gathered for eating, pies, and preserves. Their seasonal harvest reflects local knowledge of wild foods and the practice of sharing what the land produced.
Schizachyrium scoparium
Educational Description: Little bluestem is a native prairie grass important for soil health and habitat, often associated with historic savannah and prairie ecosystems. Its presence supports conservation education and helps tell the ecological story of the land alongside community history.
Andropogon virginicus
Educational Description: Broomsedge bluestem is a native grass common in Southern fields and transitional landscapes and often appears where land has been historically grazed or managed. It is a recognizable marker of how land changes over time through use, stewardship, and natural cycles.
Andropogon ternarius
Educational Description: Splitbeard bluestem is a native grass found in prairie and open woodland ecosystems and valued for supporting habitat and land stability. It reflects the ecological richness of heritage landscapes and supports education about conservation and land stewardship practices.
Educational Description: Splitbeard bluestem is a native grass found in prairie and open woodland ecosystems and valued for supporting habitat and land stability. It reflects the ecological richness of heritage landscapes and supports education about conservation and land stewardship practices.
Educational Description: Splitbeard bluestem is a native grass found in prairie and open woodland ecosystems and valued for supporting habitat and land stability. It reflects the ecological richness of heritage landscapes and supports education about conservation and land stewardship practices.
Educational Description: Splitbeard bluestem is a native grass found in prairie and open woodland ecosystems and valued for supporting habitat and land stability. It reflects the ecological richness of heritage landscapes and supports education about conservation and land stewardship practices.
Educational Description: Splitbeard bluestem is a native grass found in prairie and open woodland ecosystems and valued for supporting habitat and land stability. It reflects the ecological richness of heritage landscapes and supports education about conservation and land stewardship practices.
Educational Description: Splitbeard bluestem is a native grass found in prairie and open woodland ecosystems and valued for supporting habitat and land stability. It reflects the ecological richness of heritage landscapes and supports education about conservation and land stewardship practices.
Plants Identified During the 2023 Site Visit
A 2023 site visit identified native trees, shrubs, vines, and grasses present on the land, including Black Walnut, yaupon, sassafras, mustang grape, beautyberry, dewberry, prickly pear, and native grasses such as little bluestem.
Black Walnut
Juglans nigra
Black Walnuts (Harvest)
Juglans nigra
Sassafras
Sassafras albidum
Yaupon
Ilex vomitoria
American Beautyberry
Callicarpa americana
Mustang Grape
Vitis mustangensis
Prickly Pear
Opuntia spp.
Dewberry
Rubus aboriginum
Little Bluestem
Schizachyrium scoparium
Broomsedge Bluestem
Andropogon virginicus
Splitbeard Bluestem
Andropogon ternarius
Hickories
Live Oak
Post Oaks
Sweet Gums
Walnut Tree
Plant names are listed with common names first, followed by scientific names to support education, identification, and preservation documentation. Images are used for educational and interpretive purposes and are credited to their original sources where applicable.
Black Walnut Legacy: Healing, Foodways, and Spirit
Black Walnut trees are more than part of the landscape—they are part of the cultural record. Walnut traditions connect to agriculture, land stewardship, foodways, and women’s knowledge systems. In many Black rural families, land-based remedies supported midwifery care, postpartum support, cleansing practices, and community wellness. Plant knowledge was not only practical—it was sacred, carried through memory and teaching.
Walnut traditions are also tied to foodways. Seasonal ingredients and home-grown harvests shaped what was cooked, shared, and remembered—including community staples like tea cakes, often prepared for family visits, church gatherings, and moments of care.
Heritage Recipe Archive
Foodways are preservation. In many Black rural families, recipes were carried like oral histories—taught through practice, shared during visits, and passed down through women’s care systems. Tea cakes, often rolled by hand and cut with a butter cup or small cup, were more than a sweet treat. They were part of hospitality, community gathering, and spiritual care—offered in homes, at church events, and during moments of support.
These traditions were often connected to land-based knowledge: walnuts harvested from the landscape, teas brewed for comfort, and cleansing practices tied to wellness and protection. LCHS preserves heritage recipes and plant traditions as cultural evidence—protecting how land, memory, and women’s knowledge sustained community life across generations.
Tea Cakes as Community Foodways
Tea cakes are a historic Southern food tradition deeply familiar in many Black households and often tied to women’s knowledge, hospitality, and caregiving. Rolled by hand, cut with a butter cup or small cup, and shared during visits, church gatherings, and moments of care, tea cakes preserve history through everyday practice. Recipes—like oral histories—carry memory forward, sustaining community connection through flavor, ritual, and the simple act of making something to share
RECIPE
Black Southern Tea Cakes (Rolled + Butter Cup Cut)
This recipe reflects a traditional Black Southern tea cake style—rolled, cut with a butter cup or small cup, and flavored with vanilla and cream of tartar. Families often added walnuts based on tradition.
Ingredients:
- 1 cup butter (softened)
- 1½ cups sugar
- 2 large eggs
- 3 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon cream of tartar
- ½ teaspoon salt
- ½ teaspoon salt
- 1–2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- ¼ teaspoon nutmeg (optional)
- ½ cup finely chopped walnuts (optional)
- 2–3 tablespoons milk (only if needed)
Instructions:
- Cream butter and sugar until fluffy.
- Beat in eggs one at a time; stir in vanilla.
- Whisk flour, cream of tartar, baking soda, salt (and nutmeg if using).
- Mix dry ingredients into wet to form a soft dough.
- Add milk 1 tablespoon at a time only if needed.
- Chill dough 30–60 minutes.
- Roll to ¼ inch thick and cut with a butter cup (or biscuit cutter).
- Bake at 350°F for 8–10 minutes until lightly golden.
- Cool before serving.
Tour Highlight: The Walnut Walk (Land as Archive)
The Walnut Walk is a guided heritage learning experience that explores how Black Walnut trees and other historic plants connect to Black land stewardship, women’s healing traditions, and cultural memory.