DuBois Pioneer Home Return to DuBois Park
Watch: Iconic DuBois Pioneer Home now Reopen to the Public Volunteer Spotlight: Debbie DeLucco & Donna Adair Volunteer Spotlight: Kim Ryan Virtual Tour Episodes & Fireside Chats: DuBois Pioneer Home Please note, this historic home is built atop a shell mound, which requires climbing stairs to access and enter it. While there is no wheelchair access, interpretive information is available upon request and through the video links on this page. Please email PARK–duboishome@pbc.gov or call 561-966-6695 for information.
NOTICE: The DuBois Pioneer Home will be closed to the public on Wednesday, November 20 and Thursday, November 28. ENTRANCE Located in
DuBois Park 19075 DuBois Road Jupiter, Florida 33477 Google Maps
DOCENT GUIDED TOUR SCHEDULE:
- Tuesdays through Thursdays – 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. (last tour at 12:30 p.m.)
- For private group tours, please email PARK–duboishome@pbc.gov or call 561-966-6695. Persons with disabilities who anticipate needing accommodations or who have questions regarding access may email PARK–duboishome@pbc.gov or call 561-966-6695.
- Docents Needed! Interested in becoming a docent for the DuBois Pioneer Home? Apply online today!
- There is no cost to tour the DuBois Pioneer Home.
- Please – no wet bathing suits or sandy feet. During the winter months, guests should dress according to the weather and outside temperatures.
DUBOIS PIONEER HOME BACKGROUND:- Built in 1898, the DuBois Pioneer Home is one of the last remaining historic homesteads of its type in unincorporated northern Palm Beach County. Located along the Jupiter Inlet in Palm Beach County’s DuBois Park, “the house on the hill” is an excellent example of a self-sufficient South Florida Pioneer homestead. Built by the DuBois Family atop an ancient, monumental shell mound constructed by the Jeaga people, who inhabited Jupiter Inlet at the time of European contact, this unique homestead is rich in both historical and archeological value. The DuBois Pioneer Home and Jupiter Inlet Mound are jointly listed on the National Register of Historic Places as “Jupiter Inlet Historic and Archeological Site.”
THE MOUND:- Originally over 600 feet long and 20 feet high, the Hill is a remnant of one of the last coastal shell mounds in southeast Florida. Artifacts dating back several thousand years have been discovered at this site. The entire Park was once a thriving village, where ancient Floridians lived.
PINEAPPLE HOUSE:- The Pineapple House was located on a piece of property near present day U.S. Highway 1, on a plot of land where Harry DuBois farmed Pineapples. The little shed was built to store the harvested crops. Harry later purchased a plot of land, now DuBois Park, as the site of the home that he would bring his new bride home to. DuBois floated the Pineapple House up the river to DuBois Park, and lived in it while he constructed what is now the DuBois Pioneer Home atop the shell mound. Over the years the little house was used as a storage shed, and for awhile was a rental house – where it got its name, The Pineapple House. According to Harry’s son John, the Pineapple House is one of the oldest wooden structures still remaining in Palm Beach County today, and it pre-dates the DuBois house by at least several years.
To donate to preserving the historic DuBois Pioneer Home, please click here. |