Inscription
Cinquez Park commemorates the resilient history of one of the oldest African American settlements in Palm Beach County. Beginning in 1904, more than 15 pioneer families from north Florida and South Carolina settled in central Jupiter, homesteading 40-, 80-, and 160-acre tracts under the 1862 Homestead Act.
Several others purchased property directly. In the area then known as West Jupiter, pioneers and their descendants created a close-knit community with small businesses, churches, schools, baseball fields, and a volunteer fire station to serve African Americans segregated by the era’s Jim Crow laws and attitudes.
In addition to farming, many of the residents also provided much needed labor for local businesses, ferneries, dairies, orange groves, homes, boats, and railroads. Their hard work helped to build a thriving Jupiter. Peter Yancy, an African American real estate developer, purchased and subdivided 54 acres in the 1940s.
He named both the development and its roads after prominent Black historic figures. Most notable was Joseph Cinquez, who led an uprising on the slave ship Amistad in 1839. The preserved central green of the park once served as a gathering space for this unique community.
Location
Sources
More markers in Palm Beach
1913 Boynton Elementary School
Boynton Beach, FL
Boynton Elementary School, originally called Boynton School, was designed by West Palm Beach architect William Maughlin.
Boca Raton Town Hall
Boca Raton, FL
Designed in the Mediterranean Revival style by the architect Addison C. Mizner and completed by the architect William E. Alysmeyer, the...
Boynton Woman's Club
Boynton Beach, FL
The Boynton Woman’s Club was designed in the Mediterranean Revival style by the famous Palm Beach architect Addison C. Mizner.
Episcopal Church Of Bethesda-By-The-Sea
Palm Beach, FL
The original church constructed in 1889 on the eastern shore of Lake Worth was the first Protestant church building in southeast Florida.
Evergreen Cemetery
West Palm Beach, FL
In 1913, a group of seven men (M.J. Gildersleeve, Reverend R.W. Washington, Fred Austin, Robert Holland, Henry Meador, Sam Sharp, and...
