Bradfordville began as a settlement between 1829 and 1832 when the Bradford brothers moved to the area from around
Enfield,
Halifax County, North Carolina to farm large tracts of land. The Bradfords were direct descendants of
William Bradford,
governor of the
Plymouth Colony (Massachusetts). William's great-great-grandson, John Bradford, received a land grant located in
Halifax County, North Carolina from King
George III of
Great Britain. The mother of the Bradford sons, Sarah Cromwell Bradford, was a direct descendant of
Oliver Cromwell.
Bradfords and plantations • Thomas Anderson Bradford, born February 13, 1790, founded
Walnut Hill Plantation • Dr. William H. Bradford established
Edgewood Plantation and became the doctor for Pine Hill Plantation's slaves • Henry B. Bradford born October 30, 1791, lived a little further south on what is now Thomasville Road in the same area as brother Thomas. • Dr.
Edward Bradford, born August 2, 1798, founded
Pine Hill Plantation. The most successful brother, he later founded
Horseshoe Plantation east-southeast of Lake Iamonia. The plantation is still in existence today as a privately run hunting preserve. • Richard Henry Bradford born November 15, 1800, founded
Water Oak Plantation near
Lake McBride Another planter, Captain William Lester, from
Georgia, moved to Leon County and established a very successful and large plantation called
Oaklawn Plantation. The Bradfordville School was constructed between the years 1884–1892 on a small piece of land owned by the Lester family. The school, a wood-framed vernacular structure, represents a typical
one-room schoolhouse mentioned in rural American history. It qualifies for the
National Register and has been preserved and now resides on the southwest section of Bannerman Road. In 1886, a T. Hardenburgh established a
broom factory in Bradfordville. Hardenburgh planted of
broom corn while Col. John R. Bradford planted and another farmer planted . The combined supplied the factory with enough material to keep it in operation for a year. In the early 1900s, Bradfordville had two
general stores, a
justice of the peace (Judge Whitehead), and a Saturday meat market ran by Tommy Carr. Greene Johnson ran a
trading post that supplied staple goods like sugar and flour. Today that building, after restoration, is an animal hospital. Bradfordville is now an area with a few large homes and is at the east-southeast tip of the large housing development of
Killearn Lakes Plantation. It is mostly a major commercial area that contains
Lawton Chiles High School, 4 branch banks, 3 major retail stores plus a variety of other smaller retail stores. The proposed
Red Hills Coastal Parkway, a tolled eastern bypass of Tallahassee, would have its northern terminus in Bradfordville. ==Natural history==