Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
Cuba was untaxed and unlawful and that foreign vessels were entering the
western ports did not trouble caciques or floridanos. Even the friars partici-
pated, raising hogs and increasing the size of their sabanas with the object
of adorning their churches and bringing comfort to their convents.
In the mid-seventeenth century, royal support for soldiers, friars, and
caciques became increasingly irregular. Deeply involved in European wars
and peninsular rebellions, Spain could barely maintain the centers, much
less the peripheries. The situado was stolen by pirates, lost at sea, swamped
in red tape, or sequestered by the king’s command for more urgent needs.
For years at a time it was not paid at al . Although eventual y most of the
funds would be replaced, their arrival was so unpredictable that the colo-
nists learned to rely less on the metropolis and more on their own devices.
During periods of wavering royal support, the demands on Christian
proof
Indians rose. When the situado failed to materialize, chiefs who had not re-
ceived the gifts that reinforced their authority were pressed all the more ur-
gently to have their vassals feed the Spanish. Secondary garrisons were sta-
tioned in the provincial capitals of San Luis de Apalache, San Francisco de
Potano (in Timucua), and Santa Catalina de Guale. Settlements of floridano
traders and ranchers grew up around these garrisons, and these settlers,
too, demanded an allotment of Indian labor. Natives in the provinces now
had not only caciques and friars to feed, but soldiers and “people of qual-
ity.” Juana Caterina de Florencia, wife of the deputy governor of Apalache,
expected to be supplied with fish, milk, and six women to grind maize.
Because the waters around the peninsula were dangerous and the jour-
ney by sea was long, and because cart roads were nonexistent and pack
animals scarce, most of the freight between St. Augustine and San Luis was
carried on Indian backs. The yearly ration for a Franciscan weighed no less
than 1,800 pounds. As the number of friars increased and the supply lines
to the western doctrinas lengthened to seventy leagues and longer, more
and more burdener-days were required to deliver religious rations, and the
packs did not travel back to St. Augustine empty but full of products from
the provinces. Two mid-seventeenth-century west coast Indian rebel ions
86 · Amy Turner Bushnel
would be blamed on burdening, with the friars pointing at the governors
and the governors at the friars.
Governor Benito Ruíz de Salazar y Val ecil a, who secured the gover-
norship of Florida in 1645 by promising to build a galleon, marshaled the
colony’s resources and embarked on a program of economic development.
While the king’s galleon took shape in the shipyards of Campeche, Yucatan,
Salazar y Val ecil a sent the soldiers of the San Luis garrison north into
Apalachicola with trade goods to exchange for deerskins. To remedy the
shortage of beasts of burden he began to breed mules, and on the border
between Yustaga and Apalache he started a wheat farm.
These enterprises received a series of setbacks. The first was the Apalache
Rebellion of 1647, a kind of civil war between Christian and non-Christian
chiefs. No sooner was that suppressed than the colony was stricken with the
yellow fever that was sweeping through Caribbean ports. The “black vomit”
killed indiscriminately—whites and blacks as well as Indians—and among
the many who died was the governor. Development was interrupted a third
time by the Timucua Rebel ion of 1656, triggered by Governor Diego de
Rebolledo’s mobilization of the Indian militia after the English capture of
Jamaica. Disease, famine, and fugitivism wreaked demographic havoc in
central Florida. Outside of Yustaga, Timucua Province had too few inhabit-
proof
ants even to service the transportation network.
St. Augustine itself was badly shaken in 1668 when the privateer Robert
Searles, with a patent issued by the Jamaican governor, sacked the city, re-
portedly killing more than a hundred people in the streets and rounding up
everyone who looked African or Indian to be sold as a slave. The colony was
too strategic to be abandoned to the English, as many thought that it must.
Queen Regent Mariana ordered the viceroy of New Spain to make Florida
a priority, bring its situado up to date, increase the Franciscan fund enough
to replace the forty-three friars on the rol s with soldiers, and begin sending
the Florida treasury an extra 10,000 pesos yearly with which to construct
a lasting fort of stone. In 1670, the founding of Charleston by settlers from
Barbados underscored the urgency of defense measures, and the queen in-
creased the garrison from 300 to 350 men.
Floridanos, who regarded militia service as something for Indians, ap-
propriated a tenth of the billets in the garrison as reserve officers, or
refor-
mados
, who received the pay of a soldier but were exempt from guard duty.
They had already naturalized the benefice and lesser positions of the parish,
the office of public notary, the two proprietary offices of the treasury—of-
fices so important that those who held them doubled as a municipal council,
Republic of Spaniards, Republic of Indians · 87
or
cabildo
, to advise the governor—and its clerkships, and the position of
defender of the Indians, which they were seeking to make permanent and
salaried.
Among Florida’s notable families, the Menéndez Marquezes stood out
for their able family strategy. Descended from Juan Menéndez Marquez and
María Menéndez y Posada, two close relatives of the sixteenth-century gov-
ernor Pedro Menéndez Marquez, himself a nephew of Pedro Menéndez de
Avilés, the family maintained its position and fortunes for 150 years through
marriage, treasury offices, military offices, Cuban commerce, unofficial
borrowing from the situado, and cattle ranching. Don Thomás Menéndez
Marquez was typical. From his ranch at La Chua in the depopulated savan-
nahs of central Florida, he shipped tallow, hides, and dried beef out the San
Martín and down to Havana. Although his brother, father, and grandfather
had all been royal officials of the treasury, and he, his son, and his grandson
would follow their lead, don Thomás had no compunction about avoiding
customs duties. Floridanos honored the king’s person, not his regulations.
Al told, the building of St. Augustine’s stone fort, the Castil o de San
Marcos, took twenty-four years and cost the Crown more than 138,000 pe-
sos, much of it going for Indian labor in the coquina quarries on Anas-
tasia Island. Twice as many native workmen were stationed at the capital
proof
as formerly; many brought their families and settled down. The influx of
money and people caused prices to rise, stimulating agriculture and ranches
like La Chua. Even so, there were times when the royal storehouses stood
empty and governors were forced to seize the stores of private individuals. It
was dangerous to do this to friars or priests, who could quickly close ranks
against anyone who threatened their prerogatives.
Governor Juan Marquez Cabrera alienated the religious establishment
throughout the course of his administration (1680–1687). In one typical
instance, he ordered Captain Francisco de Fuentes, lieutenant governor
of Guale, to requisition some maize belonging to Father Juan de Uzeda,
doctrinero of San José de Zapala, in order to provide rations for refugees
from Santa Catalina de Guale who had been asked to build a fort on Sapelo
Island. When, at last, no priest would give him the sacraments, the governor
deserted his post. Governor Diego de Quiroga y Losada similarly made an
enemy of parish priest Alonso de Leturiondo by exercising eminent domain
over his granary. The priest responded by padlocking the parish church on
the Feastday of St. Mark and doing his part to ruin Quiroga in the lengthy
judicial review, or
residencia
, that followed every governor’s term of office.
In the late seventeenth century, Florida regained its sixteenth-century
88 · Amy Turner Bushnel
reputation as a land of war. The provinces came under attack seasonal y
by pirates and by slave-raiding Indians armed with English firearms in the
southeastern version of the proxy war. Yet the new royal funds for fortifica-
tions were absorbed by the castillo, with little to spare for the defense of the
provinces. When the viceroy of New Spain sent an extra 6,000 pesos with
which to build a stone tower on Cumberland Island for the protection of
the Guale, Governor Laureano de Torres y Ayala spent it on a seawall for
St. Augustine, which ended up costing three-fourths as much as the castillo
itself.
North of Apalache, in the province of Apalachicola, traders from Charles-
ton were replacing the Spanish as buyers of deerskins. Although the Apala-
chicolos were not Christians, as allies and trading partners they had fallen
within the Spanish sphere of influence since the 1640s. Florida governors
tried to counter the Anglo advance with gifts, warnings, hastily founded
missions, and a blockhouse to serve as a trading post, but the lure of English
manufactures proved too strong. The Apalachicolos moved out of the Span-
ish orbit and into the English one, to reenter history as the Lower Creeks.
Between 1680 and 1706, a major part of the Indians in the provinces
also withdrew their al egiance, silently deserting their doctrinas for a life
of liberty without friars, soldiers, or chiefs who were more Spanish than
proof
Indian. The first to defect were the Guale, whose towns on the sea islands
had become magnets for pirates and other predators. The Guale’s declining
numbers were temporarily masked by a contrary influx of Yamasee moving
down the Atlantic coast. By 1696, when the Quaker Jonathan Dickinson
passed through Florida, three towns of refugees on Amelia Island were all
that remained of Guale province. The last to leave were the Apalaches, who
forsook their province after it was invaded by Creeks and Carolinians in
1704 during Queen Anne’s War. Some of them fled to Pensacola, refounded
in 1698 to counter French influence in the Gulf. Some, under don Patricio de
Hinachuba, chief of Ivitachuco, migrated to Timucua, then to the environs
of St. Augustine, where they hoped to find safety under the guns of the fort.
Others left Apalache for parts unknown, saying that they would not remain
to die with Spaniards.
The kings of Spain had seen themselves as patrons of the Florida Indians
and the Indians as wards of the Crown. Royal alms supported their mission-
aries, royal subsidies regaled their chiefs, and a royal defender of the Indians
represented their interests. But wars in Europe, spilling into the Americas,
strained the royal revenues and patrimony to the limit. The Spanish elite
survived the war years by demanding advances of goods and services from
Republic of Spaniards, Republic of Indians · 89
people who were in no position to refuse. At such times, the colony survived
because it was ideological y reinforced. The “cult of the king” threw a mantle
of duty about forced loans and labor, while the “divine cult” taught Indians
that they were natural inferiors.
To many Spaniards, Florida must have seemed a native Utopia. In this
maritime periphery of strategic rather than economic importance, the goals
of peaceful evangelism were largely met. Indians were not enslaved; their
lands were not alienated; their lives were not shortened in mines or work-
houses. Territorial expansion observed the forms of the Conquest by Con-
tract. The rulers of the Republic of Indians, mission-educated, channeled
the labor and products of Indian peasants to the priests, fighting men, and
merchants of the Republic of Spaniards. In exchange, the natives were of-
fered an afterlife in heaven, a sanctuary on earth, and useful tools, plants,
and animals.
But pacification, Spain’s idealistic design for the mastery of North Amer-
ica, depended on enduring hierarchies and exclusive relationships. The
isolation on which it depended was repeatedly breached, giving common
Indians a chance to show how little they cared for lords of any kind. When,
in the last quarter of the seventeenth century, increasing royal investments
and increasing demands on native commoners strengthened the colony’s
proof
center at the expense of its peripheries, the mission hinterland—source of
food, labor, and export products—sloughed away, and with it went the com-
paratively enlightened system of the Two Republics.
Bibliography
Arana, Luis Rafael, and Albert Manucy.
The
Building
of
Castil o
de
San
Marcos
. Eastern National Park & Monument Association, 1977.
Bushnel , Amy Turner. “Escape of the Nickaleers: European-Indian Relations on the Wild
Coast of Florida in 1696, from Jonathan Dickinson’s Journal.” In
Coastal
Encounters: