Friday, December 28, 2018



The Second Spanish Period
1784-1821
Part One

In 1783, the Treaty of Paris ended the Revolutionary War. Because Spain was an indirect ally of the United States, the treaty returned both West and East Florida to Spain. Regarding the inhabitants of Florida, the Second Spanish period was vastly different than the first. The original Apalachee occupants of the Wakulla area were long gone, being replaced by sparsely populated Seminole and Creek villages.

Vicente Manuel de Zespedes, appointed governor of East Florida in St. Augustine, knew that the colony needed to keep a sizeable population in order to be successful. He did not care about nationality so he invited the British subjects to stay and new Americans to move in. He offered large land grants and cash for any settler who moved to Florida and started a farm. He even allowed them to stay for ten years without paying taxes. Even though this was very generous, many of the British residents left and moved to British colonies in the Caribbean, such as the Bahamas. In 1786, Governor Zespedes allowed American slaveholders into Florida for the very first time. The Second Spanish Period of Florida lasted less than forty years, during which time the Spanish had to deal with Creek/Seminole uprisings, and British traders encroaching on Spanish soil and jeopardizing the relationship between the Indians and the Spanish in Florida.

               
Regarrisoning San Marcos de Apalache

The Spanish commandant of Pensacola, Colonel Arturo O’Neill, hated the British and the Spanish policy of allowing British trade firms to remain in Florida. O’Neill was well aware of the dangers ex-British traders posed on the Spanish/Creek relationship. He wrote to Governor of West Florida Bernardo de Galvez regarding British commerce with the Indians in Florida. He then traveled to Havana, Cuba to meet with the governor. During their meeting, O’Neill expressed to Galvez his concern with halting illegal British merchants, and pirates, in the Bahamas from trading with the Indians in Florida. He was especially concerned with the old Apalachee region, and suggested that they ought to be more involved with the Panton, Leslie and Company store on the Wakulla River, which was allowed to continue doing business even after the British left.

Governor of West Florida Bernardo de Galvez
 Compelled by O’Neill, Galvez officially announced his decision to reoccupy the fort at San Marcos on April 30, 1785. He also transferred power over San Marcos from East Florida to West Florida, making it Pensacola’s responsibility to supply and man the fort which was much easier to do by water from Pensacola than it was from St. Augustine.[1] After long delays, the governor, who was fearful that the Seminoles, Creeks, and Miccosukees would reject the Spanish moving back in, suggested that a new fort be constructed if the old one was beyond repair. Spain, unlike England or the United States, recognized Indian ownership of lands within their territory, and O’Neill wanted to get permission from their chiefs before they reestablished themselves at San Marcos. The needed supplies and personnel were gathered under the command of army Captain Luis Bertucat who was to be San Marcos’s first commandant of the Second Spanish Period. Bertucat had a forty-ton schooner called the San Marcos de Apalache, as well as two smaller schooners. O’Neill ordered the minute flotilla first to sail to and anchor off of Dog Island so they could ascertain whether or not the Indians in the area were going to be violent or peaceful.

On June 20, 1787, Bertucat spotted Cape San Blas, and for the next few days explored St. Vincent, St. George, and Dog Islands. On June 23, the tiny fleet entered Apalachee Bay and the mouth of the St. Marks River. Once he was about five miles upriver, Bertucat spotted the tiny peninsula that stuck out into the confluence of the St. Marks and Wakulla Rivers and arrived at the old fort San Marcos. He found the structure overgrown with a canopy of palm fronds, covering much of it. He noted that the bombproof was in good condition and that the northwestern side of the fort, or the bastion on the Wakulla River side, was completed but its mirror image that was supposed to be built on the St. Marks River side had never been started. The moat that once protected the north side of the fort was now clogged full of debris. The limestone that formed the bastion was in good shape, but the merlons, entrenchments, wooden structures, and the inner structures required a lot of repair.[2]

Bertucat decided to repair the old fort over building a new one because the limestone wall was in good condition, but a lot of work was required to make it formidable. On June 25, the soldiers began clearing the fort of trees, bushes, and other debris, and some soldiers managed to discover an old British cannon and several cannonballs. Bertucat had the men clean the bombproof, and that is where he quartered them for the time being. Over the next several days, they built a kiln and cut wood to fix the roofs of the warehouses inside the fort.

On June 29, the Panton, Leslie and Company Wakulla store factor, Charles McLatchy, traveled downriver to the fort to witness the formal ceremony of the Spanish re-garrisoning Fort San Marcos. A few weeks later in early July, Bertucat visited the Panton store on the Wakulla River, which consisted of McLatchy’s house, the store itself, warehouses for animal skins, quarters for employees, quarters for slaves, a few gardens, and a pasture for livestock. Bertucat assured McLatchy that his presence in the area would not disrupt his business, and McLatchy promised to help persuade neighboring Indians to welcome the Spanish back.[3]

Bertucat wrote frequently to his superiors, requesting more men and supplies but rarely ever got any. Trouble arose when some Americans from Georgia crossed the Florida border and descended on a Creek village, about five days away from San Marcos, and killed many Indians as well as some American traders they deemed to be turncoats. The Americans were angry because they believed the Spanish had been supplying the Indians with muskets, ball, and powder and allowed them to raid American homesteads. Bertucat dispelled these allegations by stating the Spanish simply helped provide weapons for the Indians so they have a way to attain animal furs to sell. Aggravated by Bertucat because he was constantly writing and complaining about the condition of the fort, his superiors replaced him in 1788. With not a lot of improvement done on the fort, Captain Diego de Vegas became the new commandant. But he was soon replaced as well, by Captain Jose Monroy, who died during service in 1790. After his death, Bertucat returned briefly, but after once again constantly requesting more repairs and supplies than Pensacola was willing to give, he was again replaced, this time by Captain Francisco Guesy. Soon, the pirate William Augustus Bowles entered the stage.

The Spanish granted trading privileges to Panton and Leslie because there were no Spanish merchants established in trade with the regions Indians. They continued doing business at their Wakulla store, and was allowed to establish a company depot in Pensacola. The Spanish granted Panton, Leslie & Company a monopoly on this trade in East Florida, and eventually in West Florida. For many years Panton, Leslie & Company dominated trade with the Creeks, Miccosukees, and Seminoles. After a while, the Indians needed more goods than they had hides to trade with, so many of them became deeply indebted to the company. The business had established a friendship with a Creek chief named Alexander McGillivray, a highly educated half-Creek, half-Scottish man who pledged loyalty to Spain. McGillivray’s pledge to the Spanish led other Creek chiefs to do the same. Like it was during the British period, San Marcos de Apalache continued to be a lonely isolated post, but it was still a central meeting grounds between Indian leaders and Europeans. Panton, Leslie and Company maintained a store, just a few miles north of San Marcos on the banks of the Wakulla River. Not knowing what was about to happen them, the store operated as usual.


Din, G. C. (2012). War on the Gulf Coast: The Spanish Fight Against William Augustus Bowles. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.



[1] Din, p.11
[2] Ibid. p.18
[3] Ibid. p.19

Thursday, December 27, 2018


The British Period
1763-1783


Map of West and East Florida

Fort St. Marks

While the Spanish where still constructing the stone fort, the British took control of San Marcos de Apalache in 1763, which they called St. Marks. The British needed this small, isolated fort to protect the established trading posts that were an important part of keeping the peace with the natives.[1] James Pampellone, the commanding officer of the British 9th Regiment, the first British garrison stationed at Fort St. Marks, described the stone fort as having nine sides and nine angles, situated between two rivers, and surrounded by a ditch, that filled with water during high tide. He ordered his soldiers to begin repairs on the fort, which was not in the best condition when the Spanish turned it over. They fixed the houses within the fort, and raised the protective walls by three feet. The fort’s second commander, George Swettenham, had vegetables planted outside the walls, and also encouraged the soldiers to plant their own personal gardens, so that there would always be a steady supply of provisions for the garrison.

Fort St. Marks during British Occupation
A hurricane damaged Fort St. Marks on October 23, 1766, but the royal engineer, James Moncrief, was quick to make repairs. In 1767, the British government in Florida moved the northern boundary of West Florida to a line extending from the mouth of the Yazoo River east of the Chattahoochee River, consisting of roughly the lower third of the present states of Mississippi and Alabama. During this time, more Creeks began migrating into northern Florida, to the old fields of the Apalachee, and joined the Seminole tribe.

Just a few years later, in 1769, Fort St. Marks was ordered by the commander-in-chief of British forces in North America, Thomas Gage, to withdraw its garrison due to military spending cuts. The governor of West Florida, James Grant, argued unsuccessfully that because of possible wars in the future, strategically, the forts in East Florida ought to be maintained not dismantled. But nevertheless, Fort St. Marks was abandoned by the British military, who then marched overland to St. Augustine. The fort itself was turned over to Daniel McMurphy who began to operate an Indian trading post there. By September 1769, McMurphy was at Fort St. Marks supplying the few British residents of the area, and bargaining with Creeks and Seminoles for deerskins and furs. Governor Grant was confident that this arrangement would promote commerce, Creek migration into Florida, and would enhance relations with Creek and Seminole villages already established near St. Marks. Nearly two decades would go by before the fort was re-occupied by a military force.

Panton, Leslie and Company

When Great Britain’s American colonies declared independence, many Floridians condemned it, as the majority were loyal to the crown. When news of the declaration reached St. Augustine, the citizens burned effigies of John Hancock and Sam Adams in protest, and many actually helped launch raids into the American south during the war. The two Floridas remained loyal to Great Brittan throughout the American Revolutionary War. However, Spain (participating indirectly as allies of the French) captured Pensacola from the British in 1781. Panton, Leslie & Company was a company of Scottish merchants active in trading in the Bahamas and with the native tribes of what is now the southeastern United States during the late 1700s and early 1800s. Panton, Leslie & Company was a partnership formed at St. Augustine, the capital of British East Florida, by William Panton, John Leslie, Thomas Forbes, Charles McLatchy, and William Alexander in 1783, for the purpose of trading with the Indians of Florida and adjacent territory claimed by Spain.

The partners, who were loyalists, had been forced out of the United States during the American Revolution with their property confiscated. Panton, Leslie & Company were granted a monopoly on this trade in East Florida, and eventually in West Florida. For many years Panton, Leslie & Company dominated trade with the Creeks and Seminoles. The partners harbored a great hatred to the United States, and used their influence with the Indians to advance Spanish territorial claims against the U.S., and to encourage Indians to resist American settlers and U.S. attempts to acquire land from the tribes. To do business with the Creeks and Seminoles of the Wakulla area, Panton, Leslie and Company established a trading post on the Wakulla River, about four miles north of San Marcos de Apalache.
This map shows the location of the trading post (old store) in relation to the fort





Sources: 


Raab, J. W. (2008). Spain, Britain and the American Revolution in Florida, 1763-1783. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc.




[1] Raab, p.44

Thursday, December 20, 2018


The First Spanish Period
1565-1763

The first successful attempt at a mission in Florida started with the founding of St. Augustine in 1565, and with the establishment of presidios. Governor Pedro Menendez wrote a letter to King Philip II on September 8, 1565, “I have offered to Our Lord all that He may give me in this world…in order to plant the Gospel in this land for the enlightenment of its natives.” Besides converting native populations to Catholicism, the mission system also helped Spain keep better control over Florida, and the people. It also helped prevent foreign powers from establishing basses on Spanish territory. At first the missions in Florida were staffed by Jesuits but they soon abandoned the missions due to the increasing hostility of the natives, which lead to the deaths of some of the priests.


Mission San Luis de Talimali

Starting in 1573 with only two missions remaining, Franciscan friars took over for the Jesuits. At first they stuck to the vicinity of St. Augustine, then around 1587 they began to spread south down the Atlantic coast taking their mission to the Guale and Timucua peoples. The Spanish had not had any real contact with the Apalachee to the west of St. Augustine since the time of the Hernando de Soto expedition. Fray Martin Prieto was the first Spaniard to try to renew contact with the Apalachee. In the early 1600s, the Franciscans expanded their missions westward across Timucua territory and built El Camino Real, or the Royal Road, between St. Augustine and the Apalachee Province. Franciscan friars established small missions and villages along the Royal Road.

While in the Timucuan province, Fray Prieto learned of a great war that had been waged for years between the Timucua and the Apalachee. He wanted to end this war in order to bring Christianity to the Apalachee. Fray Prieto secured the release of two Apalachee prisoners that the Timucua were holding and sent them back to Apalachee with a message that the Spanish were coming on a mission of peace.[1] Fray Prieto arrived in the Apalachee province with a group of Timucuan chiefs, as well as one-hundred-and-fifty Timucuan warriors. There he found what could have been the entire population of Apalachee, led by seventy or so chiefs. The friars and the Timucuan received a friendly greeting from the Apalachee, as a seventy-year-old Apalachee chief from a place called Ivitachuco, an important village that was located in present-day Jefferson County, spoke at great lengths in favor of peace. Fray Prieto then supervised a meeting between the chiefs of these two peoples, in which peace was established.[2]

The Apalachee then requested a mission of their own but it would be twenty-five years before they received one. There simply were not enough friars to go around at that moment, but in the meantime the Apalachee and the Spanish continued to have a good relationship. Spain finally sent friars to Apalachee in the 1630s to start a permanent mission. This may have been done because the Spanish authorities believed the Apalachee province could solve their food and labor shortage problems. By 1633, two Franciscan friars, Pedro Munoz and Francisco Martinez, founded the first two missions in the Apalachee area, and it is believed that Mission San Luis de Inhayca was one of them. In 1638, the first group of Spanish soldiers arrived, to stay and protect the mission. In 1656, for reasons we do not know, the chief of the Apalachee agreed to move San Luis de Inhayca about two miles west, to the second tallest hill in the area, and renamed it San Luis de Talimali. He also allowed the building of a blockhouse surrounded by palisade walls to house the Spanish soldiers.

Mission San Luis
The village of San Luis looked much like a traditional Apalachee village with Spanish buildings mixed in. In the central plaza the Apalachee played ball games and conducted rituals. The Apalachee’s largest building was the council house which could hold up to three thousand people and was used by them to conduct tribal business. The last main public building that surrounded the central plaza was the church with its detached kitchen. By request of the Apalachee chief as a sign of respect, the Spanish agreed to build the church with its door facing the entrance of the council house, which was across from it on the other side of the central plaza. The blockhouse and palisade, a protective wall around the blockhouse made of logs, was built not far from the church. The Apalachee lived in small, circular, palm-thatched dwellings away from the central plaza in clusters near the fields they were farming. The Apalachee would travel to the central plaza for prayer groups, Sunday services, and for entertainment such as the ball games.

Wattle-and-daub, or wood planking with thatched roofs, were the preferred way to build the residences that the Spanish families lived in, who began arriving in larger numbers after 1675. These two-room, small cottages, were built closer to the central plaza than the Apalachee dwellings. Just like in many Spanish colonial towns, the native peoples lived on the outskirts of town, while the Spanish lived in town. San Luis, besides St. Augustine, was the only settlement where large numbers of Spanish and native peoples lived close together. Over 1,400 residents lived at San Luis, for three generations, and the town became the western capital of Spanish missions and the Apalachee nation from 1656 to 1704.

           
San Marcos de Apalache

The Governor of Florida, Luis Horruytiner (1633-1638), stated that the mission effort could not survive or progress unless a suitable port was established on the Apalachee coast.[3] Besides San Luis, the Apalachee Province had ten smaller missions and twenty-five satellite villages. The mission system was flourishing, especially in the Apalachee Province because the land there is so fertile and was providing large numbers of food, mostly corn, to the people of St. Augustine. The produce was transported south from San Luis to what the doomed Panfilo de Narvaez called the “Bay of Horses”, at the confluence of the San Marcos and Guacara rivers, (the Spanish also called the Suwannee River the Guacara River, but in this case I am referring to the Wakulla River) then out to St. Augustine, or Havana from a port they called San Marcos de Apalache. The Spanish may have been using this port as early as 1639, and developed a small settlement there. The inhabitants of Mission San Luis traveled to and from San Marcos de Apalache by canoe. They paddled down Munson Slough from the mission then portaging to Wakulla Springs and paddled down the Wakulla River until they reached San Marcos.

Map showing Mission San Luis to the north and the port village of San Marcos de Apalachee to the south
Sometime in 1677 a band of pirates attacked the port village, sailed up the San Marcos River, and made their way to San Luis where they kidnaped a few priests to be used as ransom. After that horrific event the governor of Florida at the time, Hita Salazar, demanded that San Marcos de Apalache be fortified.[4] To the governor’s displeasure, there was not enough money in the royal treasury to fund a strong stone fort, so the Spanish erected a small, wooden fort, and coated the logs with lime to give the appearance of a formidable stone structure.

Artist interpretation of one of the wooden forts at San Marcos de Apalachee
Around midnight on March 20, 1682 another pirate ship entered the mouth of Apalachee Bay, probably to obtain fresh water. The brigands spotted the fort. From about four miles out, the fort at San Marcos de Apalache looked very formidable. The pirates decided not to try their luck until one of them noticed a vessel anchored near the fort. The swashbucklers felt that attacking the fort was a worthy risk after all, if it meant they could seize that ship for themselves. The captain of the targeted vessel, which was a merchant ship that had just arrived from Havana, was inside the walls of the wooden fort, as well as three priests from Mission San Luis. San Marcos de Apalache was only garrisoned by six men at the time, Lieutenant Pedro de los Arcos and five soldiers he had at his command. Outside the walls of the fort in small, thatch-roofed huts where a detachment of troops from San Luis, under the command of Lieutenant Perez, and a large group of native Apalachee that they brought with them.

            In the early hours of the morning, around four-o’clock, a sentry at the fort spotted three small boats, carrying about twenty-five men each, sailing towards them. One boat went to the merchant ship, the other two came ashore to attack the fort. The sentry barely had time to warn the small garrison before the pirates stepped foot on dry land. The soldiers and the Apalachee from San Luis ran away without a fight and the huts they were staying in were put to fire. The pirates realized that the fort was not as formidable as they originally thought, and the captain ordered it burned to the ground. The Spaniards tried to put up a fight, but one of the fort’s cannon broke when fired, and the other one could not seem to hit its target, which was the merchant ship that the pirates were trying to commandeer. Lieutenant Arcos went to retrieve more gun power when somebody opened the gates to the fort. The pirates swept in and took the small garrison hostage. They then took everything that would be of use to them and burned what was not. They sent a few of the hostages to San Luis to collect a ransom. In the meantime, the pirates took their prisoners back to their ship anchored in the harbor. The pirates hung around for ten days, waiting for their ransom, coming ashore a few times to re-light the fort when the flames went out. The ransom never came. The pirates gave up and took everybody back ashore, setting them free, except for Lieutenant de los Arcos and one other soldier. The pirates later dropped them off on a beach in Cuba. They eventually made it to St. Augustine, where the lieutenant was court-martialed and dismissed from the military for surrendering San Marcos de Apalachee to pirates. Within the next year, the wooden fort was rebuilt.

In the minds of the Spanish authority, Florida encompassed the entire present-day continental United States, but they had been fighting for control over it with the English and the French since before the founding of St. Augustine. This was a losing battle as Spain did not have the resources to protect the entire continent. The English began encroaching from the north, and in 1670 they established Charles Towne (present-day Charleston, South Carolina), the capitol of its Carolina colony. One of Charleston’s biggest economic engines was the slave trade. In 1693, Carlos II, King of Spain, declared that any slaves belonging to Englishmen that escaped into Florida would be given their freedom if they convert to Catholicism and declare allegiance to Spain. This greatly angered the English as their slaves began to run away south to Florida, mostly to the vicinity of St. Augustine.

The English demanded their “property” back, but the Spanish refused to send the newly freed men back into English captivity. War was declared in 1701, and the North American theater is referred to as Queen Anne’s War. In 1702, English militiamen and their Creek allies, about 800 total, invaded Florida and attacked St. Augustine. Most of the Spanish and native allies were able to escape death by fleeing into the formidable Castillo de San Marcos, which was completed in 1695, as the town of St. Augustine was burned by the invading English. The second biggest Spanish settlement of the time, Mission San Luis, was not attacked immediately, but other smaller missions and villages between Apalachee and St. Augustine were destroyed by the invading English. They killed or enslaved most of Florida’s native peoples.


In 1703 through 1704, the English and their native allies invaded the western portion of Florida and many Apalachee were killed or enslaved. By July 1704, the leaders at Mission San Luis, fearing the arrival of the English, who were getting closer, decided to destroy the village rather than let the English have it. The Spanish abandoned San Luis, and San Marcos de Apalache, and fled back to St. Augustine. Some of the Apalachee went with them, but the rest fled to Fort Louis de la Louisiane, present-day Mobile, in the newly founded French colony of Louisiana. The English raids into Florida left former towns and villages, other than St. Augustine, desolate. Most of the natives were killed or enslaved, and the rest were scattered about.

Artist interpretation of one of the wooden forts at San Marcos de Apalachee
After the invading English and Creek Indians of 1703-1704, and the collapse of the Apalachee missions, the area of present-day Wakulla County was virtually empty of any European or native people until after 1716, when the Spanish leadership decided to re-establish a presence in the area. They wanted to resettle the Apalachee Province and invited the native peoples to return as well. The Spanish decided to rebuild the fort at San Marcos de Apalache in order to offer protection to the area and the new settlers. Early in 1718, the governor of Florida sent Captain Jose Primo de Rivera with fifty soldiers to build a blockhouse where the old fort was. Instead he built a square stockade, each side being seventy-two feet long, with an elevated platform in the center for three cannons to be placed.[5] Primo also brought with him a group of natives who were there to help extend friendship to other native peoples whose allegiances were wavering between the Spanish and the English. It did not take too long before new Indian villages began popping up along the Wakulla and St. Marks rivers, mostly Creek, in close proximity to the Spanish at San Marcos de Apalache.



Native American Refugees Enter Wakulla- The Seminoles

There were a series of wars to the north of Florida that greatly impacted the future of the Spanish colony. Native American refugees from those northern wars, such as the Yuchi and Yamasee, after the Yamasee War in South Carolina (1715-1717), migrated into Florida in the early 1700s. More arrived in the second half of the 1700s, as the Lower Creeks, part of the Muscogee people, began to migrate from several of their towns in Alabama and Georgia into Florida to evade the dominance of the Upper Creeks and the pressure of English colonists. They spoke primarily Hitchiti, of which Miccosukee is a dialect, the primary traditional language spoken today by the Miccosukee Tribe of Florida.

In Florida, the Creeks intermingled with the Choctaw and other few remaining indigenous people. In a process of ethnogenesis, the Native Americans formed a new culture which the Spanish called "Seminole", a derivative of the Mvskoke' (a Creek language) word simano-li, an adaptation of the Spanish cimarrón which means "wild", or "runaway.” There was a powerful tribe called the Miccosukee, who lived northeast of present-day Tallahassee around Lake Miccosukee, and another group lived around the Alachua Prairie, near present-day Gainesville.

Creek Village
For almost the next fifty years, the Spanish occupied San Marcos de Apalache, which mostly served as a base for communications and diplomatic relations with the natives and to hear gossip about French and English relations with them. The Creeks and Seminoles were becoming more dependent on European goods such as muskets, pots, needles, scissors, and cloth. They came to the fort to receive these goods and gifts, the Spanish basically buying their loyalty. However, the Spanish believed that some were beginning to turn to British suppliers for their goods, so it was important that the Spanish give them as many gifts as they could in order to keep good relations.

Native Americans, however, slowly began to drift away from San Marcos, with numbers falling from around 1,000 in 1726, to less than 400 by 1739. In 1745 the Spanish government authorized a trading post to be established at the fort to entice the Creeks and Seminoles to build villages nearby to maintain and strengthen their alliance. Often times, at San Marcos de Apalache, the Spanish did not have much to give, and the Indian population near San Marcos continued to decline. To make matters worse, in 1758, a powerful storm surge created by a hurricane entered Apalachee Bay and engulfed the tiny peninsula on which San Marcos was located and drowned forty men inside the wooden fort.[6] This situation continued in the remote Spanish fort in the backwoods of the former Apalachee Province. But, around the 1760s, on a site a little north of the wooden fort, the Spaniards began construction on a permanent stone fort.

Plan for Fort San Marcos de Apalachee
Across the Wakulla River from the fort, the Spanish quarried limestone. To protect themselves while quarrying the rock the Spaniards constructed a watchtower by their quarry. Building the stone fort was a very slow process, which was never fully completed to the plan’s specifications. While the Spanish at San Marcos de Apalachee were still working on completing the new stone fort, and maintaining good relationships with the local natives, the French and Indian War, or Seven Years War, broke out in 1754. Spain sided with the French, against the British, but the Spanish were becoming weaker as Great Britain was getting stronger. British forces seized Spanish and French colonies in the Caribbean, including Cuba, in which Havana was a major port for the Spanish. By 1763, French and Spanish diplomats began to seek peace with Great Britain. The end result was the 1763 Treaty of Paris, which ceded all French territories east of the Mississippi River to Great Britain. Spain received Cuba back, but lost Florida to Great Britain. Nearly the entire Spanish population left Florida, taking along most of the remaining native population with them to Cuba, except the refugee Creeks, Miccosukees, and Seminoles.

 The British government divided the territory into East Florida and West Florida, the border being the Apalachicola River, putting present-day Wakulla County in East Florida. The British soon constructed the King’s Road, connecting St. Augustine to Georgia. The British government gave land grants in Florida to officers and soldiers who fought in the French and Indian War in order to encourage settlement. People began publishing reports in England and the rest of the American colonies of East and West Florida’s natural wealth and beauty. A large number of British colonists began to enter the Floridas, mostly coming from South Carolina, Georgia, and Great Britain.


Artist interpretation of stone fort













[1] Hann, p.11
[2] Ibid., p.11
[3] Ibid., p.15
[4] Boyd, p.4
[5] Din, p.7
[6] Ibid., p.8

Sources Used:

Boyd, M. F. (1936, July). The Fortifications of San Marcos de Apalache. The Florida Historical Quarterly, pp. 3-34.

Hann, J. H. (1988). Apalachee: The Land Between the Rivers. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.


Din, G. C. (2012). War on the Gulf Coast: The Spanish Fight Against William Augustus Bowles. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.

Tuesday, December 18, 2018



European Contact and Settlement
Part Two

          Hernando de Soto

Around 1496, or 1498, Hernando de Soto was born in Extremadura, Spain. Like Juan Ponce de Leon, and other conquistadors, Hernando de Soto came to the Spanish West Indies in search of military fame and wealth. De Soto came with Pedro Arias Davila, the first Spanish governor of Panama, in 1516 at the age of 18 or 20. Here, de Soto is given his first military command. During his conquest of Central America, like other conquistadors, de Soto used cruel tactics and arranged the extortion of native villages by capturing their chiefs and holding them for ransom. De Soto became well known for this practice. He gained fame among his men for being a very brave, loyal, and an excellent soldier. De Soto looked up to men like Juan Ponce de Leon and craved his kind of fame and status.

In Leon, Nicaragua, Hernando de Soto was appointed a regidor, or council member. He led an expedition up the coast of the Yucatan Peninsula in 1530 searching for a passage to the Pacific Ocean, which he discovered did not exist. After that failure, de Soto left Nicaragua and joined Francisco Pizzaro’s conquest of Peru in 1532, becoming his second in command. De Soto captured Chief Atahualpa of Peru, and held him hostage. Atahualpa’s people filled an entire room full of gold and other treasures in hopes of securing Atahualpa’s release. The Spanish began to hear rumors about a new Incan army coming towards Cajamarca, located in the northern highlands of Peru. De Soto, with an army of 200 was sent to investigate.

While de Soto was away, Chief Atahualpa was killed by the Spaniards. When de Soto returned having never discovered the rumored Incan army, Francisco Pizzaro decided he wanted to conquer the Incan capital of Cuzco. In 1533, his army marched towards the capital. When they got close, Hernando de Soto and about forty soldiers went in advance of the main army. They managed to take the city before the rest of the army arrived. The Spaniards began searching through the town, stealing whatever valuables they could. This made Hernando de Soto a very rich man.
By 1534 Hernando de Soto had grown in fame, wealth, and power and was serving as Lieutenant Governor of the newly conquered city of Cuzco. In 1535, de Soto decided it was time to return to Spain, so he packed up all his wealth and belongings and returned to his homeland. He arrived in Spain in 1536, a very rich man. He was given privileges and honors, such as the right to conquer Florida, and the governorship of Cuba. Cabeza de Vaca, one of the four survivors of the doomed Narvaez expedition, had just returned to Spain from his horrible journey and de Soto was fascinated by his stories. The new governor of Cuba expected to conquer, and colonize Florida within four years.         

Hernando de Soto rounded up 620 volunteers for his expedition to Florida, and they set sail for Havana, Cuba. The expedition sailed for Florida from Havana on May 18, 1539 on nine ships carrying 600 soldiers, twelve priests, two women, several slaves, 223 horses, mules, war hounds, and a herd of hogs. The priests were there because de Soto intended on converting the natives to Catholicism. Learning from Cabeza de Vaca’s recount of the Narvaez expedition and the mistakes Narvaez made that doomed his men, de Soto came better prepared. It is widely believed that Hernando de Soto’s point of landing in Florida was near the present-day Tampa Bay area. The fleet landed on May 30, 1539 and de Soto named the bay Espiritu Santo, or Holy Spirit. Soon after the Spaniards landed, a patrol of soldiers discovered a small group of natives. To the Spaniard’s astonishment, one of them was a white man.

Juan Ortiz had been living with the natives since he was captured in 1529 while helping to search for Narvaez and his doomed expedition. After being spared from becoming cooked alive, he was adopted by the natives, and overtime could barely speak Spanish anymore. In 1539, when the de Soto expedition arrived in Florida, Chief Mococo told Ortiz that he may return to his people. Ortiz, accompanied by a few of his friends, set out to find his fellow Spaniards. Suddenly, they were attacked by a group Spanish soldiers. Ortiz managed to remember some Spanish and shouted out in his native tongue. The startled Spaniards halted their attack, and took the young Ortiz to see de Soto.

            After living with the Timucuan people for over a decade, Juan Ortiz knew the language well, and after conversing in his native tongue for the first time in a decade, it all began to come back to him. Ortiz then served de Soto as an interpreter on their journey through the Florida wilderness. The explorers stayed relatively close to the coast line for over a month, until July 15, 1539, when de Soto decided to march into the interior. Again, learning from Narvaez’s mistakes, de Soto told his ships to stay anchored at Espiritu Santo, and await word from a messenger as to where to go next. De Soto was seeking gold, but he was not finding any. When asked about the shiny metal, many natives pointed north and said something that sounded like “Apalache.” They were most likely referring to the Appalachian Mountains where there actually was gold. Because of this Hernando de Soto decided to head north.

            The Apalachee territory was the land between the Aucilla River and the Apalachicola River, and after hearing reports of the gold he would find there de Soto set his sights towards that land. As de Soto’s force moved toward Apalachee, other native peoples close to the area warned de Soto that the fierce Apalachee “would shoot them with arrows, quarter, burn, and destroy them.”[1] Because the Narvaez expedition had been there a decade before, the Apalachee were aware of the Spanish, and were hostile towards them. Hernando de Soto is not known for his kindness towards the native peoples he encountered, in fact, he went against his King’s orders to treat the natives well and convert them to Catholicism. Instead, de Soto enslaved, mutilated, and executed many natives.

After Hernando de Soto’s army crossed the Aucilla River they were in Apalachee territory. They continued inland until they came to a great village that they found abandoned. The Apalachee had left the town in anticipation of the Spaniards arrival. The town was called Anhaica (ann-hi-ka), and was the Apalachee capitol located in present-day Tallahassee not far from the capitol. Anhaica had numerous feed stores with an abundance of food and many empty dwellings. The winter of 1539-1540 was closing in so de Soto decided Anhaica would be his winter encampment. The army spent around six months in Anhaica, and it is believed that the first Christmas in the present-day United States was celebrated there.

          
First Christmas
While encamped in Anhaica, when they were not defending off an attack from the Apalachee, the Spanish explored the area, and areas nearby. They traveled south, towards Narvaez’s Bay of Horses. They did not find gold but they did find the skulls and bones of Narvaez’s warhorses. As the weather warmed up Hernando de Soto and his army left Anhaica in March of 1540. After the Spaniards left, the Apalachee returned to their village. The de Soto expedition crossed into present-day Georgia, as to them all of the present-day continental United States was Florida, and thus belonged to Spain. They turned west and entered present-day Alabama, where they had a furious battle with natives near Tuscaloosa. The army continued westward, discovering the mouth of the Mississippi River. The army traveled all the way to present-day Hot Springs, Arkansas. On May 21, 1542, Hernando de Soto caught a fever that ended his life. His men placed his body in the Mississippi River, and continued on under the leadership of Luis de Moscoso. After going into present-day Louisiana and Texas, the army returned to the Mississippi River where they built several ships, and found a water route out of Florida to New Spain. Only 300 to 350 people survived out of the original 620 volunteers, Hernando de Soto was not among them.



Pedro Menendez de Aviles


After a failed attempt to set up a mission, and Tristan de Luna’s failed colony of Puerto de Santa Maria, near present-day Pensacola Bay, the French began to try to colonize Spanish Florida. In 1562, French Protestant Huguenot Admiral Gaspard de Coligny, directed Jean Ribault to lead an expedition to the “new world” and establish a French Huguenot colony. With a fleet of around 150 potential colonists, Ribault left France for Florida on February 18, 1562. The fleet landed at the mouth of the St. Johns River, present-day Jacksonville, on May 1, 1562. Jean Ribault named the river May, after the month of their landing. Ribault then erected a stone column, naming the territory for France. This was a bold action, considering that by 1562 the Spanish had claim to Florida for over fifty years. 

            Ribault sailed north from there, and eventually established a colony on present-day Parris Island, South Carolina, called Charlesfort, in the honor of the French King, Charles IX. Jean Ribault soon decided to return to France for fresh supplies and left 27 men stationed at Charlesfort. Upon arriving back in France in July of 1562, Ribault found himself in the middle of the French War of Religion that started between the Catholics and the Protestant Huguenots. Soon, Ribault was arrested, and locked up in the Tower of London.

            The French religious war was over by 1563, and Admiral Coligny had time to concentrate on Florida again. While Ribault was imprisoned in England, Rene Goulaine de Laudonnière was sent as his replacement to Charlesfort, which had fallen into desolation. Laudonnière decided to establish a new colony on the banks of the St. Johns River, present-day Jacksonville. They named the new colony Fort Caroline on June 22, 1564. The colony sustained itself for the next year, but then began to fall into desolation as well. The English slave trader John Hawkins arrived at Fort Caroline and offered to take the French colonists back to France, but Laudonnière refused.

            In 1565, the Spanish were fed up with the French encroaching on their territory. The Spanish king wanted Fort Caroline destroyed as well as the protestant French “heretics.” The crown approached Pedro Menéndez de Aviles, commander of the Spanish Treasure Fleet, and ordered him to organize an expedition to Florida with the authority to settle and govern it, but first he had to rid Florida of the French. Where Juan Ponce de Leon, Panfilo de Narvaez, Hernando de Soto, and Tristan de Luna failed, Pedro Menéndez de Aviles succeeded. The new governor of Florida was in a race to beat Jean Ribault to Fort Caroline, who had organized a fleet of 800 settlers on five ships. The two fleets met each other off the coast of Florida, and had an indecisive skirmish.

Menendez ordered his ships to head southward where they disembarked on August 28, 1565, the feast day of St. Augustine of Hippo. There, they built a presidio, which is a fortified base established to protect the settlers from hostile natives, pirates, and colonists from enemy nations, such as France and England. They named the settlement San Augustin, present-day St. Augustine, and built up earthworks to further protect themselves. An attack from the French at Fort Caroline seemed imminent and on September 10, 1565 Jean Ribault took his fleet south with the majority of his men towards St. Augustine to pursue Menendez. Hearing of Ribault’s movements, Menendez sent soldiers on foot forty miles north to Fort Caroline during a terrible hurricane. The storm tossed Ribault’s fleet around, and the French wrecked south of St. Augustine near present-day Daytona Beach. The surviving crew, including Jean Ribault, wandered north to present-day Matanzas Inlet, about fourteen miles south of the Spanish at St. Augustine.

Back at Fort Caroline, the Spanish attached during the hurricane and easily defeated the small garrison of French soldiers left behind. There were about twenty soldiers with a hundred colonists inside the fortification and the Spanish slaughtered nearly all of them, only sparring around sixty women and children. The Catholic Spaniards hung the dead bodies of the protestant French in trees with a sign reading “Hanged, not as Frenchmen, but as heretics”. Menendez decided to rename Fort Caroline, and called it San Mateo. There Menendez left a detachment of men, and headed back to St. Augustine. Soon after his return to St. Augustine, Menendez was informed that the French had shipwrecked and were only fourteen miles south of them. Before Governor Menendez could really work on building a permanent settlement, he must first destroy the French presence in Florida.

The marooned French sailors were soon tracked down by the Spanish, and rounded up. Jean Ribault thought he was going to be treated humanely, so he surrendered without a fight. He was dead wrong. By order of the King of Spain, the Spaniards gave the protestant French a chance accept Catholicism. Those who did not convert to Catholicism were taken behind a sand dune and hacked to death with a sword. Only a handful of the French were converted, and around 350 men, including Jean Ribault himself were massacred. The location of this event still bears the name “Matanzas”, Spanish for “massacre.” As horrific as it was, still, Governor Menendez carried out his order to dispel the French from Florida, and with the entire coast back under Spanish control, he turned his attention the King’s other orders, which were to build a permanent colony and establish a mission system for the natives. The Governor invited Jesuit priests to St. Augustine to start ministering to the locals. Menendez anticipated St. Augustine, and Florida altogether, to prove lucrative to himself and the King.[2]

[1] Hann, p.6
[2] Lyon, p.44



Sources used: 
 The New History of Florida (pp. 40-61). Gainesville: University Press of Florida.
Lyon, E. (1996). Settlement and Survival. In M. Gannon,

 Hann, J. H. (1988). Apalachee: The Land Between the Rivers. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.