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Announcements: Cedar Key Chamber of Commerce Gets New Board
November 30th, 2012

Announcements: MOSAIC ARTIST CHOSEN FOR 2013 CEDAR KEY ART FESTIVAL DESIGN
November 30th, 2012

Conservation: Fish of the Week - Southern Stingray
November 29th, 2012

Arts and Entertainment: Cedar Key Arts Center - Holiday Mini Projects Party
November 29th, 2012

Arts and Entertainment: Florida`s Eden and Bev Ringenberg at the Arts Center Opening December 1
November 28th, 2012

Announcements: Cedar Key Public Library Kids` Christmas Party
November 28th, 2012

School News: Shark Reports -11/28/12
November 28th, 2012

Columns: A FLORIDA CRACKER TALE - "Plantation at Fort Lauderdale and the Brahman Bull"
November 27th, 2012

Columns: Those Way-out Roundabouts
November 27th, 2012

Arts and Entertainment: Suwannee Valley Players - Open Auditions: "Little Shop of Horrors"
November 27th, 2012

City News: CITY COMMISSION VOTES TO ADOPT FEMA ORDINANCE
November 26th, 2012

Letters to the Editor: Recent "Conservation" letters/column`s to the Cedar Key News
November 26th, 2012

Law Enforcement News: Levy County Arrest Report 11/26/2012
November 26th, 2012

Announcements: CEDAR KEY BOOK BUNCH NEWS
November 25th, 2012

Announcements: Cedar Key Woman`s Club Fall Festival
November 24th, 2012

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This Week`s Library Program: Storyteller Kathy Dobronyl to Portray Florida Cracker History

This Week`s Library Program: Storyteller Kathy Dobronyl to Portray Florida Cracker History

by CKN Staff Reporter

Kathy Dobronyl is a teacher and storyteller. She comes to the Cedar Key Library this Thursday, March 14, to tell a story of the local turpentine industry of decades past. The program, upstairs at the Library, will begin at 5 pm.

When Kathy Dobronyl first met Dolores Cribbs, a Florida Cracker, the older woman said to her, "I wish someone would tell my story."

Using Cracker tales and expressions (and with a little help from a special hat and long dress), Kathy Dobronyl transforms herself into Dolores Cribbs to share stories about the Florida turpentine industry.

Dolores Cribbs found her family working at a Florida turpentine camp in the Big Bend area of Florida in the 1895 Florida census. Her great granddaddy never came back from the war, and the family moved from farming in Alabama to tapping trees and collecting gunk in Florida. Turpentine was a family affair. Entire families worked under the watchful eye of the "woodsrider" as he tallied the count of buckets collected from cat faces in the Florida piney woods.

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