History of Shellcrete
From colonial tabby to modern coquina concrete — exploring 500+ years of shell aggregate construction.
Ancient and Colonial Origins
Shellcrete roots stretch back over a thousand years. Native American communities along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts used crushed shells mixed with sand and ash to create durable construction materials long before European contact.
Spanish colonizers arriving in Florida and the Carolinas in the 16th century adopted and refined this technique, calling the resulting material tabby. They used it to construct forts, plantation buildings, and coastal infrastructure that still stands today.
18th and 19th Century Use
During the plantation era, tabby was widely used throughout coastal Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida. Its abundance of raw material combined with its durability made it the construction material of choice for many decades.
Fort Frederica on St. Simons Island (built 1736), the Kingsley Plantation, and numerous church ruins throughout the Sea Islands of Georgia and South Carolina were all built using tabby construction.
Key Milestones in Shell Concrete History
Pre-1500s: Native American Shell Midden Construction
1565: Spanish Colonial Tabby in Florida
1736: Fort Frederica — A Major Tabby Structure
1800s: Plantation Tabby Across the Sea Islands
Early 1900s: Portland Cement Displaces Tabby
1980s to 2000s: Decorative Concrete Revival
2010s to Present: Modern Shellcrete Industry
Notable Historical Shellcrete and Tabby Structures
- Castillo de San Marcos, St. Augustine, FL — Built 1672 to 1695 using coquina stone; a National Monument
- Fort Frederica, St. Simons Island, GA — 1736 British fortification; one of the largest surviving tabby structures
- Kingsley Plantation, Fort George Island, FL — 19th century plantation with tabby slave quarters; now a National Historic Site
- Wormsloe State Historic Site, Savannah, GA — 18th century tabby fortification ruins
- St. Helena’s Episcopal Church, Beaufort, SC — 1724 church with tabby walls, still in active use today
- Bulow Plantation Ruins, FL — 19th century tabby sugar mill ruins; part of Bulow Creek State Park