Capps, Florida

Capps is an unincorporated community in Jefferson County, Florida, United States. It is located at the intersection of U.S. Routes 19 and 27. During the 1940s and 1950s, Capps was the headquarters of an agribusiness known as Tungston Plantation, owned by Everett P. Larsh, an industrialist from Dayton, Ohio, and managed by L. H. Crampton. Tungston plantation comprised a total of approximately 16,000 acres, of which about 8,000 acres was planted in tung trees. Each year, the tung nut was harvested and brought to the mill at Capps, and its contents processed into tung oil for use in paints, varnishes and other products. During those years, Tungston Plantation constituted the largest tung operation in the U.S. under single ownership.

Historic Asa May House

Capps is the location of the Asa May House, which is listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.

Geography

Capps is located at 30°24′37″N 83°54′40″W.[1]

gollark: (Not actual quote)
gollark: "We have amazing devices allowing us to access much of society's knowledge and compute problems intractable as of a century ago and contact anyone else with one instantly but someone misused them so they're banned."
gollark: Also, my school banned use of phones at lunch/break for some stupid reason recently.
gollark: Well, that's hyperbolic, but mostly it doesn't.
gollark: Now, humans are currently much better at abstract thinking. Unfortunately no part of the education system encourages this.

References



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