Historic Haile Homestead

Historical place · Alachua County

Historic Haile Homestead

Historical place · Alachua County

1

8500 SW Archer Rd, Gainesville, FL 32608

Photos

Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by Haile Homestead on Facebook
Historic Haile Homestead by Haile Homestead on Facebook
Historic Haile Homestead by Mom0ja (Atlas Obscura User)
Historic Haile Homestead by Mom0ja (Atlas Obscura User)
Historic Haile Homestead by Mom0ja (Atlas Obscura User)
Historic Haile Homestead by Haile Homestead on Facebook
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null
Historic Haile Homestead by null

Highlights

Step back to 1856 at the Historic Haile Homestead, where the walls are covered in 12,500 words of quirky family scribbles on this Sea Island cotton plantation estate.  

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8500 SW Archer Rd, Gainesville, FL 32608 Get directions

hailehomestead.org
@haile_homestead_

Information

Static Map

8500 SW Archer Rd, Gainesville, FL 32608 Get directions

+1 352 336 9096
hailehomestead.org
@haile_homestead_

Features

wheelchair accessible parking lot
wheelchair accessible entrance

Last updated

Jul 30, 2025

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The Best of Weird Florida

"The walls of the Haile Homestead, one of Florida’s last antebellum homes, are covered in the thoughts, notes, and general scribbling of the eccentric clan. Built in 1856 using enslaved laborers, the home sat on the family’s 1,500-acre cotton plantation known as Kanapaha. The plantation successfully operated for decades, before the house and land were left dormant sometime in the 1930’s. It was not until an intrepid movie producer rediscovered the property that the strange contents of the home’s interior were revealed. It seems that the entire Haile family (Thomas Evans and Serena Chesnut Haile had 15 children) had taken up the odd habit of writing everything and anything on the walls of their home. Nearly every room is covered in doodles, lists, notes, and journals. Altogether over 12,500 words describing recipes, the guest lists of parties, growth charts, domestic inventories, and essentially any other type of record one might think of. The strangest part of all is that no one seems to know for sure why they did it, though docents suggest it was possibly due simply to a lack of paper. Thanks to a State of Florida grant, the Historic Haile Homestead was refurbished and restored as a historical site in the 1990’s and is currently open to visitors. The wall writings have been preserved in their original state, so any guest who is willing can try to decipher the family’s strange compulsion, though the walls were formally transcribed in 2001." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

https://www.atlasobscura.com/lists/the-best-of-weird-florida
View Postcard for Historic Haile Homestead

dante luna

Google
I photographed 48 of 50 states and this was one of my Florida stops! We got a tour from Cadence and Gus! Young folks that were engaged storytellers that were passionate about being in the space. Respectful, thorough and thoughtful.. Cadence was amazing… thank you so much for the tour and sharing your heart with us!

Roads Traveled Photography

Google
One of the oldest houses in Alachua County, the Historic Haile Homestead was the home of Thomas Evans Haile, his wife Esther Serena Chesnut Haile and 14 of their children. The Hailes came here from Camden, South Carolina in 1854 to establish a 1,500-acre Sea Island Cotton plantation which they named Kanapaha. Enslaved black craftsmen completed the 6,200-square-foot manse in 1856. The 1860 census showed 66 slaves living here. The Hailes survived bankruptcy in 1868 and turned the property into a productive farm, growing a variety of fruits and vegetables including oranges. Serena Haile died in 1895; Thomas in 1896. The Homestead, which passed to son Evans, a prominent defense attorney, became the site of house parties attended by some of Gainesville’s most distinguished citizens. The Hailes had the unusual habit of writing on the walls; all together over 12,500 words with the oldest writing dating to the 1850’s. The Homestead was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. A restoration was completed in 1996. Still partly owned by descendants of Evans Haile, the Homestead is one of the few remaining homesteads built by Sea Island cotton planters in this part of Florida.

MJ

Google
Enjoyed the local history lesson, our docent Ken was very informative. Those walls "talked". 🤗 Watched the videos before visiting the homestead.

TA Carolina

Google
I loved the homestead. We weren’t allowed to walk around the property at all. Weren’t allowed to tour any part of the house without the volunteer with us. That would have been fine, except for the fact that the volunteer never stopped talking, couldn’t remember the facts, and skipped a lot of the tour because of poor time management. I understand that these are volunteers, but please just write it down, print it out, and allow the patrons to see what they came to see. We came to tour a homestead. Not just a few rooms in the house. A homestead is a home and property. Our tour was cut very short and we drove a long way to see it. The home and property are beautiful and it has a rich history. I regret not being able to see it all.

Christopher Miller

Google
Very knowledgeable tour guide. Cool temperatures in late January. Very enjoyable afternoon at Historic Haile Homestead.

Hana cookery

Google
Absolutely worth a visit. They have a free one hour guided tour of the house, you only pay for the entrance.

Ed s

Google
Very interesting place with a lot of history "written" on the walls. The tour could stand to be longer so there would be more time to read what has been written. The dates next to the writing gives it perspective. With financial support, the homestead will reveal even more history and artifacts that are sure to be found on the property surrounding the home.

Anna Martinez

Google
I wish I could give this beautiful home and property a higher rating. We have looked forward to going here for over 2 years. Today we made it! Pulling into the parking lot at 2:55. With the next tour starting at 3:15. We were soon greater by a screaming Melanie asking what we were doing there. If we wanted to do a tour. I asked her what the property was about and what the tour entailed. She ignored andwering me and walked past me to my husband. She then said "I'll go talk to him because if you're not staying you need to leave so I can lock up and go home early" my husband decided to stay because he knew how much i was looking forward to it, we walked in and I began to pay. She was rushing us the whole time. Just yelling over and over to hurry and it will be $10. I told her I heard her the first time and she was ruining the experience, she was rude. She scoffed and said "Oh yeah, you think so". She should actually be embarrassed at how she acted. We then went on the tour. She didn't acknowledge me at or even look at me. Just gawked over my husband and basically gave him a tour while I followed behind. What a disgrace she is to this facility. I want my money back and an apology. The older man inside was kind but she also yelled and barked orders at him whole he was trying to show us the model before we left with the bossy woman. We left before the tour even started and then people showed up after us when the tour was suppose to start and she made them run to catch up to us and she wasn't going over the history again for them.