Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
Except for the instal ation of the Spanish governor or his lieutenants as su-
preme authority over each native polity, a traditional roster of native politi-
cal officials remained largely unchanged and unchal enged. Such differences
doubtless were among the reasons that the new faith seemingly held stron-
ger sway over Florida’s natives than it did over New Mexico’s Pueblo during
an equivalent span of time, that Florida’s mission structures retained their
original simplicity, and that the natives’ council house continued to be the
mission vil ages’ most impressive and most frequented building.
Members of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits), who made the first mission
efforts in Florida, uniformly met resistance, even though the missionaries
94 · John H. Hann
were accompanied by soldiers. Jesuits are members of a religious society
founded in 1534 and devoted to missionary and educational work. They
worked briefly at single sites among southwest Florida’s Calusa, the Miami
area’s Tequesta, the Escamacu in the region of Beaufort, South Carolina, and
at Tupiqui and one or more other places in Guale. Some of the resistance
was doubtless a legacy of de Soto’s brutal passage through Florida or was
influenced by the natives’ contact with the French just before the Jesuits’ ar-
rival. But, more fundamental y, the Jesuits met resistance to their message
everywhere as soon as they spoke il of the natives’ deities or when they
revealed that the natives would have to abandon polygyny, sororal marriage,
and other customs on becoming Christians. Soldiers’ demands for food and
friction with natives also handicapped the Jesuits’ efforts. The soldiers’ kill-
ing of two successive head chiefs and other nobles at Calusa precipitated
flight by the rest of the inhabitants, which ended the mission effort among
them until late in the seventeenth century. The Jesuits viewed friction or
hostilities between soldiers and natives as insuperable obstacles, responsible
for their failure.
In reality, from Calusa and Tequesta to Guale and Escamacu, the Jesuits
dealt with natives whose confidence in their own value system and world-
view had not been shaken sufficiently to make them susceptible to the Euro-
proof
pean Christian message. However much Jesuits might browbeat the Indians
with their superior training in rhetoric and logic, they could not move them
to abandon their beliefs. Everywhere in Florida, Jesuits made their efforts
before the time was right. For the Calusa and other nonagricultural Indians
of south Florida, the time would never be right. The Indians’ killing of Jesu-
its who had gone to the Chesapeake Bay region caused the withdrawal of the
society from Florida in 1572. But their work among the natives had ceased
prior to their leaving.
Down to 1595, little is known about the activity of the first Franciscans,
who came in 1573. Franciscans were members of the religious community
formal y cal ed the Order of Friars Minor, founded in Italy by St. Francis
of Assisi in 1209. They dedicated themselves especial y to preaching in the
growing cities of medieval Europe, to missions among non-Christians, and
to charitable work. They emphasized humility and were usual y referred to
as friars, a term derived from the French word for “brother.”
In Florida the friars had their earliest success among Saltwater and Fresh-
water Timucua living near St. Augustine and on the St. Johns River in the
latter part of the 1570s. Surprisingly, Jesuits appear to have made no effort in
those regions despite the Freshwater Timucua’s friendship with Menéndez
The Missions of Spanish Florida · 95
de Avilés from the beginning and despite his friendly relations with some
Saltwater Timucua as wel . At the start, as Eugene Lyon has noted, a lan-
guage barrier, a lack of trained missionaries, and unsettled relations with
Saltwater Timucua limited religious contact. The Jesuits may have passed
over the St. Augustine region initial y because one of the first three to arrive
was killed by Timucua-speaking Mocama just to the north of the mouth of
the St. Johns River when he was stranded on shore with some sailors.
Nombre de Dios is considered the oldest of Florida’s enduring missions.
Work among its people and the Freshwater Timucua of San Sebastian, just
to the south of St. Augustine, appears to have begun around 1577. But people
of both vil ages attended Mass in St. Augustine until 1587, when the first for-
mal missions, known as doctrinas, appear to have been established in both
vil ages. San Juan del Puerto, at the mouth of the St. Johns River, was also
founded by 1587. A bridgehead represented by the Franciscans’ conversion
of a Guale head chief disappeared quickly when that chief was killed by a
nephew of another chief whom he had confronted over disrespect for his
authority. The Spanish governor’s reluctant hanging of the nephew at the
insistence of the deceased chief’s wife precipitated revolt from Guale north
to South Carolina’s Escamacu-Orista. The revolt precluded missionary work
in that region at least until 1588, when San Pedro Mocama was founded
proof
on Georgia’s Cumberland Island. Family ties between chiefs of Nombre de
Dios, San Juan, and San Pedro may have facilitated mission activity at this
date, as had arrival of a new band of friars in 1587. By 1588 at least five mis-
sions and a number of outstations, or visitas, existed among Freshwater and
Saltwater Timucua.
Arrival of more friars in 1594 permitted a major effort among the Guale.
Six friars were working there by 1597. By then friars were making sorties
into hinterland Timucua vil ages whose chiefs had responded favorably to
a new governor’s invitation to render obedience to his king and to receive
gifts the king had sent to those ready to give that obedience. But later that
same year, a general uprising of the Guale interrupted the mission effort, as
they killed five of their six friars and carried off the sixth one to an inland
town to serve his captors as a slave. An imprudent friar’s effort to block
the rise to head chieftainship of a young Christianized chief who refused
to abandon polygyny precipitated the trouble, but the support given the
uprising suggests that the discontent involved more than the sexual mores
of one individual. The friars’ baptism of natives before telling them clearly
about the scope of the obligations they were assuming in accepting baptism
and about the tribute and labor demands of Spanish civil authorities were
96 · John H. Hann
factors as wel . In the uprising’s wake, the governor reduced the maize trib-
ute for the Mocamas to a symbolic six ears for each married Indian. A young
Spaniard shipwrecked on Guale’s coast in 1595 placed part of the blame on
earlier atrocities committed by soldiers on punitive expeditions. The gover-
nor’s sustained campaign of fire and blood eventual y broke the solidarity of
the Guales. A majority, coalescing behind a new leader, sued for peace and
agreed to capture or kill the rebellion’s initial leaders in the inland region
where they had taken refuge to escape Spanish retaliation.
Rapid growth resumed in 1607, when arrival of a few new friars made
it possible to capitalize on the interest in Christianization shown by some
among the hinterland tribes ten years earlier. In that year the friars estab-
lished the first new missions among Timucua-speakers known as Potano
living in the vicinity of Gainesville. Within several years, a friar descending
the Santa Fe to the Suwannee established a mission on the Gulf in a vil age
named Cofa at the mouth of the Suwannee. From Potano, friars moved into
Columbia County to work among Timucua-speakers identified as Utina. In
1623 friars began to work among other Timucua-speakers known as Yustaga,
living between the Suwannee and Aucil a Rivers. Friars also resurrected the
Guale missions and began work in the remaining Timucua-speaking prov-
inces of mainland south Georgia’s coast and hinterland, Acuera along the
proof
Oklawaha, and Ocale south of Potano. Two friars began formal missioniza-
tion of Apalachee in 1633. It was the last of the major mission provinces to
be established until late in the century. A mission at Mayaca on the St. Johns
River south of Lake George consolidated work done by visiting friars prior
to 1602.
Evidence to account for the change of heart that made that expansion
possible is fragmentary. In addition to the attraction of the gifts being of-
fered, a series of Spanish successes against French intruders enhanced the
Spaniards’ image as allies worth cultivating. A personal embassy by a lead-
ing Christianized Indian from Nombre de Dios may have swayed Utina’s
most prestigious leader. Use of a mailed fist to punish the killing of Span-
iards brought a reversal of hostility on the part of the Potano and Surruque.
For some, such as Utina’s head chief and Apalachee leaders who asked for
friars, the change of heart may have been abetted by loss of faith in the na-
tive religious system as a bulwark for their power. Such chiefs may have
viewed exotic goods provided by Spaniards and esoteric knowledge and
skil s Spaniards made available as enhancing the chiefs’ prestige in the eyes
of their people. That may explain the eagerness of many of the early con-
verts to learn to read and write and the Utina chief’s willingness to permit
proof
Names and locations of Franciscan missions at St. Augustine and north along the
Atlantic coast in the seventeenth century.
98 · John H. Hann
destruction of the idols in five vil ages under his immediate jurisdiction.
The Apalachee leaders’ request for friars was motivated in part at least by be-
lief that a Spanish alliance would enable leaders to regain control over their
subjects that they had lost. For that and other reasons, Spanish authorities
delayed the missionization of Apalachee for a generation.
Florida’s missions contrast with those of California in that their friars
general y did not alter the natives’ settlement pattern, which consisted of
a large central vil age under a head chief, smaller ones under subordinate
chiefs, and still smaller chiefless hamlets. Friars established their doctrinas
in the head vil ages, visiting subordinate vil ages and hamlets to give in-
structions and building churches in some of the subordinate vil ages. Some
such subordinate vil ages eventual y became missions, at least for a time. In
1602, however, a friar advocated consolidation of the many small hamlets
surrounding the coastal missions. There is no indication that it was done,
but as populations dwindled, consolidation may have occurred in some
cases. In Apalachee, best known of the mission provinces, the settlement
pattern persisted virtual y intact until destruction of the missions in 1704.
Guale is the one area where consolidation and extensive moving about of
missions is known to have occurred. Between 1604 and the 1670s, many
Christian Guale from former mainland doctrinas and their subordinate vil-
proof
lages moved to the islands off Georgia’s coast. Little is known of the timing
and circumstances of those moves, except for the Tolomato, whose chief led
the 1597 revolt. In the 1620s, the governor pressured its inhabitants to move
to a site near St. Augustine to provide ferry service and assist in the unload-
ing of ships at St. Augustine. In this earlier period, the desire for greater
security from attacks by Westo and Yuchi probably motivated such moves.
A later consolidation on Amelia Island resulted from British attacks.
Florida’s inland missions in general were not missions of conquest as were
those of the coast to a degree. This difference also sets those missions apart
from those of New Mexico and California. Soldiers did not accompany the
first friars who began work in the hinterland, following a policy laid down
explicitly by the Crown in that era. This seemingly posed no problem for
the friars in Utina, but the situation was different in Potano, Yustaga, and
Apalachee. Even though Potano’s head chief had been baptized in St. Au-
gustine prior to the launching of the formal mission effort in his land, his