Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
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6
The Missions of Spanish Florida
John H. Hann
Missions in Florida, as in other parts of the Spanish New World, sought
to spread the knowledge and message of Christ to native peoples. Their
goal was to persuade the natives to accept Catholicism and allegiance to the
king of Spain. Establishment of missions assumed special importance in the
Spanish New World under Pope Alexander VI’s grant of exclusive dominion
in the New World to Spain’s monarchs because the grant was justified by the
Crown’s assumption of the obligation of preaching Christ’s teachings to the
natives. The royal contract given to Florida’s founder, Menéndez de Avilés,
proof
clearly included the obligation to bring clergymen to instruct the natives in
the Christian faith.
People may not associate missions with Spanish Florida as readily as they
link them with the early Spanish experience from Texas through California.
But missions played no less a role in Florida than they did elsewhere in the
establishment of Spanish control. During the 138 years of Florida’s mission
era, 1567 to 1705, missions were attempted or established among at least
eleven distinct Indian peoples at about eighty mission centers that served
a far greater number of individual vil ages and hamlets. Almost all of this
was the work of Spanish Franciscans. The missions existing simultaneously
numbered forty-four by the mid-1630s and probably increased by a few more
over the next ten years as new missions appeared among the Apalachee of
the Tal ahassee region. The number may have begun to contract by 1650,
if not before. Twenty thousand Indians had been baptized by 1630, and
more than 50,000 others catechized. Only twenty-seven Franciscans were
then available to staff the thirty-two missions, which served more than two
hundred settlements, sixty of which had churches. Thirty-five Franciscans
served 30,000 Christian Indians by 1635. Contraction had definitely set in
by 1655, when there were about forty missions. The thirty-six that had friars
· 91 ·
92 · John H. Hann
held only 26,000 Christian Indians by then. A 1656 revolt, the turmoil that
followed, and the spread of diseases further hastened the decline.
The relatively successful missions stretched from just south of St. Au-
gustine northward along the coast through Georgia almost to the Savan-
nah River. They reached westward across north Florida to the Apalachicola
and extended into parts of south Georgia west of the Okefenokee Swamp.
They penetrated central Florida along the St. Johns River for an undefined
distance south of Lake George, possibly reached farther south along the
Oklawaha, and probably went farthest south in Marion County to the vi-
cinity of the Cove of the Withlacoochee. Apalachee, Guale of the north
Georgia coast, and various Timucua-speaking groups constituted the ma-
jority of the missionized natives. The Apalachee lived between the Aucil a
and Ochlockonee Rivers. Timucua-speakers occupied all of north Florida
east of Jefferson County, much of the eastern half of Georgia below the Al-
tamaha River, coastal Florida southward to the vicinity of Daytona Beach,
and central Florida southward along the rivers for an undefined distance.
Tama-Yamasee, Chine, Amacano, Pacara, and Chacato, Mayaca-speakers,
and a few Sabacola comprised the remainder. The Tama, from north cen-
tral Georgia, migrated to Apalachee to be missionized. Yamasee, also from
north central Georgia, migrated to Apalachee, to coastal Georgia, and to
proof
Mayaca-speaking territory along the upper St. Johns River. The Sabacola
lived along the Chattahoochee River. The Chine and Chacato migrated to
Apalachee from the Florida Panhandle. The Amacano and Pacara, linguistic
brothers of the Chine, were living with the Chine on Apalachee Bay’s Spring
Creek when the Chine mission was established in 1674.
In general, Florida’s mission experience paralleled that of other frontier
territories of the Iberian New World, but its experience was unique in a
number of ways because of various interrelated factors. First, and foremost,
soldiers rather than settlers remained the core of most of Florida’s Spanish
families, even though historian Eugene Lyon has recently revised our image
of early Spanish Florida as little more than a bleak and often starving gar-
rison town. The relative lack of settlers and the Crown’s close supervision
of developments in Florida spared its natives from some of Spain’s most
exploitative economic institutions. The Crown checked the several attempts
to introduce enslavement of the natives. Tribute was not a regular part of the
formal Spanish regime in Florida. Spaniards introduced tribute to a degree
in an informal sense. In areas where soldiers were introduced some time af-
ter the establishment of missions, natives were expected to contribute some
of the food those soldiers consumed, although there was no uniform policy
The Missions of Spanish Florida · 93
in this matter. Similarly, natives carried soldiers’ bedding from post to post
without pay as a service to the king. The paid labor draft known as the
repartimiento was the sole formalized, economical y exploitative institution
imposed on Florida’s natives in general.
Although economic considerations were a factor motivating establish-
ment of missions in Florida, none is known to have become an economic
enterprise dominated by friars in the way of the typical California mission.
Except for the earliest approaches to coastal natives in the 1560s, missionar-
ies began their work unaccompanied by soldiers and, with few exceptions,
at the invitation of elements among the native leaders rather than by thrust-
ing themselves uninvited upon the indigenous societies. By the last years
of the sixteenth century, leaders from interior provinces, where no Spanish
conquest of the Indians preceded establishment of the mission, began to
render obedience to Spain’s king and to ask for missionaries.
On the other hand, missions were not the major feature in Spain’s initial
approaches to Florida’s natives that they were in the Spanish domination of
Texas and California. The first missionaries were overshadowed by the adel-
antado, Menéndez de Avilés, and his soldiers or by his governor-successors
and their soldiers. With the possible exception of some coastal missions
and a few tribes from distant hinterland frontiers, the practice of bring-
proof
ing natives to mission centers at places chosen by the missionaries was not
employed in Florida as it was in California. Florida Franciscans established
their missions in preexisting vil ages. In contrast to the Franciscans who
established the first missions in New Mexico and Alta or Upper California,
Florida’s Franciscans did not bring large herds of cattle, horses, or sheep to
strengthen their hand in convincing natives to accept their tutelage. There is
no evidence that the Spanish authorities induced Florida’s Indians to adopt
a Spanish-type roster of governor, lieutenant governor, alcalde, or mayor,
and
alguacil,
or peace officer, for their vil ages as was done in New Mexico.