Florida Flywheeler's Park Another Magic Kingdom

There is another Magic Kingdom in Florida: the Florida Flywheelers Antique Engine Club show grounds

The General Store at Flywheeler Park. Buildings like this make up the village at the Florida Flywheelers' showgrounds.
The General Store at Flywheeler Park. Buildings like this make up the village at the Florida Flywheelers' showgrounds. The buildings offer a touch of history, and a handsome way to house members' collections.
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Leave your mouse ears at home: there's more than one magic kingdom in Florida. Head south about an hour out of Orlando, and rediscover the past at the Florida Flywheelers' show grounds. 

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At a 160-acre site near Fort Meade, the 1,600 members of the Florida Flywheelers Antique Engine Club have re-created an old-time village. A blacksmith hammers at his forge. An 80-year-old steam-powered sawmill cuts through logs like a knife through butter (though with slightly more noise). The hardware store carries a full inventory of long-forgotten tools. Stained glass windows are propped against a wall at the church, awaiting installation. And over at Fred's garage, a mechanic is sprawled beneath a Model A.

In just three years' time, a village has sprouted from a field once thick with palmettos. Did the Flywheelers use magic dust? No, something more powerful: volunteers.

"We've got a lot of great members who just pitched in and went to work," said Flywheelers president Dick Edwards. "Everything here has been done totally by volunteers."

The volunteers have a vested interest in their village. Each building is conceived, designed and erected by an individual member, who also finances the undertaking. The structure then becomes the property of the club, but the builder retains control of the structure for the duration of his life.

"When there's a member who's interested in a certain thing, a specialty collection that goes along with farming and rural life," Dick said, "he can put up his own building, and house his collection in it. The club will own the building, but the guy who built it controls it, and he can pass that on to his children, if he wants."

The result is a quick-growing, though carefully planned, village. All building proposals must win approval from a building committee. Several are in the works: a funeral parlor, sheriff's office and jail, livery stable, ice cream parlor, bank and one-room schoolhouse may be in place by year end.

In contrast to other communitieses, this village discourages bureaucracy and red tape.

"This has all been done on a handshake," Dick said.

Each of the completed buildings are sturdy, lasting structures, furnished with historically authentic pieces and, in some cases, extensive collections. Many – like a tobacco barn modeled on an old Amish barn in Pennsylvania, and a covered bridge modeled after one in Indiana – are copies of actual buildings. The village presents an enduring and attractive way for members to showcase their collections.

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