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Authors: Michael Gannon
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The Missions of Spanish Florida · 109
Title page of a diction-
ary and grammar to
proof
the language of the
Timucua natives of
Florida, compiled by
Franciscan missionary
Francisco Pareja in 1614.
in western Timucua, the ball game had lost most of its religious overtones
by the 1670s.
The Spanish intrusion had its most decisive impact in the material sphere
on agriculture in adding many new cultigens and introducing new activities
such as raising chickens and hogs, dairy farming, and animal husbandry in
general. In contrast to missions in California and elsewhere, chickens, hogs,
and cattle belonged to individual Indians or to Indian communities. Dispo-
sition of the cattle was controlled by Indian leaders, not the friars, but friars
control ed communal plantings of maize, wheat, and other crops in sup-
port of the church and feeding of the poor and incapacitated. In Apalachee
by 1695, the two keys for the building in which produce was stored were
entrusted to the chief and another leading man chosen by the governor’s
deputy. Export of produce to St. Augustine and Havana increased the area
110 · John H. Hann
under cultivation and, consequently, the labor performed by ordinary Indi-
ans. The degree to which the laborers benefitted, if any, is not known.
For Florida’s aboriginal peoples, the coming of the Europeans and adop-
tion of the mission way of life under Spanish auspices were disastrous in
the long run. Their population col apse was an inevitable consequence of
their encounter with the pathogens of Old World peoples. But in many cases
their extinction resulted from preventable human factors: a political y and
economical y motivated struggle for empire among English, Spanish, and
French; the English determination to oust the Spaniards from Florida and
eliminate native peoples who had allied with the Spaniards; and the Eng-
lish demand for Indian slaves. Without such human factors, some of the
missionized peoples eventual y would have acquired immunity to the new
diseases and may have survived to the present, as did their Creek neighbors
and many southwestern native groups.
Notes
1. Gabriel Díaz Vara Calderón, letter to the queen, 1675 Archivo General de Indias
(Sevil e), Santo Domingo, 151; microfilm furnished by Wil iam H. Marquardt. Cf. Lucy
L. Wenhold, ed. and trans.,
A
17th-Century
Letter
of
Gabriel
Díaz
Vara
Calderón,
Bishop
of
Cuba,
Describing
the
Indians
and
Indian
Missions
of
Florida
(Washington: Smithsonian proof
Miscel aneous Collections, vol. 95, no. 16, 1936).
2. Fray Francisco Alonso de Jesus, “1630 Memorial of Fray Francisco Alonso de Jesus
on Spanish Florida’s Missions and Natives,” edited and translated by John H. Hann,
The
Americas
50, no. 1 (July 1993):88.
Bibliography
Boyd, Mark F., Hale G. Smith, and John W. Griffin.
Here
They
Once
Stood:
The
Tragic
End
of
the
Apalachee
Missions.
Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1951.
Gannon, Michael V.
The
Cross
in
the
Sand:
The
Early
Catholic
Church
in
Florida,
1513–1870.
Rev. ed. Gainesville: University Presses of Florida, 1983.
———. [pseud. Charles W. Spellman]. “The ‘Golden Age’ of the Florida Missions, 1632–
1674.”
Catholic
Historical
Review
51, no. 3 (October 1965):354–72.
Geiger, Maynard, O.F.M.
The
Franciscan
Conquest
of
Florida
(1573–1618).
Washington: Catholic University of America, 1937.
Hann, John H.
Apalachee:
The
Land
Between
the
Rivers.
Gainesville: University Presses of Florida, 1988.
———. “Demographic Patterns and Changes in Mid-Seventeenth-Century Timucua and
Apalachee.”
Florida
Historical
Quarterly
64, no. 4 (April 1986):371–92.
———
.
History
of
the
Timucua
Indians
and
Missions.
Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1996.
The Missions of Spanish Florida · 111
———. “The Indian Vil age on Apalachee Bay’s RíoChachave on the Solana Map of 1683.”
Florida
Anthropologist
48, no. 1 (March 1995):61–66.
———. “The Mayaca and Jororo and Missions to Them.” In
The
Spanish
Missions
of
La
Florida,
edited by Bonnie G. McEwan, pp. 111–40. Gainesvil e: University Press of
Florida, 1993.
———
.
Missions
to
the
Calusa.
Gainesville: University of Florida Press/Florida Museum of Natural History, 1991.
———. “St. Augustine’s Fal out from the Yamasee War.”
Florida
Historical
Quarterly
68, no.
2 (October 1989):180–200.
———
.
Summary
Guide
to
Spanish
Florida
Missions
and
Visitas
with
Churches
in
the
Sixteenth
and
Seventeenth
Centuries.
Washington: Academy of American Franciscan His-
tory, 1990 (reprint from
The
Americas
56, no. 4 [April 1990]:417–513, with il ustrations
added).
———. “Twilight of the Mocamo and Guale Aborigines as Portrayed in the 1695 Spanish
Visitation.”
Florida
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66, no. 1 (July 1987):1–24.
———. “Visitations and Revolts in Florida, 1656–1695.”
Florida
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(1993).
Kessel , John L.
Kiva,
Cross,
and
Crown:
The
Pecos
Indians
and
New
Mexico
1540–1840.
Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1987 (original y published Washington:
National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, 1979).
Lyon, Eugene.
Richer
Than
We
Thought:
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Material
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Augustine.
St. Augustine:
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St. Augustine Journal of History, St. Augustine
Historical Society, 1992.
Oré, Luis Jerónimo de.
The
Martyrs
of
Florida
(1513–1616).
Translated by Maynard Geiger.
New York: Joseph F. Wagner, 1936.
proof
Vargas Ugarte, Ruben. “The First Jesuit Mission in Florida.” In
Historical
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edited by Thomas F. Meehan, 35:59–148. New York: United States Catholic Histori-
cal Society, 1935.
Worth, John E. “The Timucuan. Missions of Spanish Florida and the Rebellion of 1656.”
Ph.D. diss., University of Florida, 1992.
7
Raids, Sieges, and International Wars
Daniel L. Schafer
In the middle years of the seventeenth century, Spain’s La Florida colony en-
tered a period of steep decline from which it never recovered. Epidemic dis-
eases, including yellow fever, smal pox, and plague, swept away thousands
of Native Americans at the coastal and inland Franciscan mission vil ages.
By 1655, only 26,000 Christian Indians remained at the thirty-eight mission
vil ages. Four years later, a measles epidemic claimed 10,000 more lives. La
Florida had become what the historian Amy Bushnell has called a “hollow
peninsula” with only two population centers: the provincial capital of St. Au-
proof
gustine situated on the Atlantic coast at the northeast of the peninsula, and
the Apalachee province located approximately 180 miles to the west amidst
the rich agricultural lands of today’s Leon and Jefferson Counties. A vast
and mostly deserted core lay between, with a small number of farms and
cattle ranches controlled by floridanos (persons of Spanish descent born in
Florida) situated near the road from St. Augustine to Apalachee. Corn and
other provisions transported from Apalachee by Native Americans subject
to the Spanish-imposed labor levy represented a vital food supply for resi-
dents of St. Augustine.
Also along the road from Apalachee were strategical y located mission
vil ages populated by the survivors of epidemics, hostile attacks by pirates,
predatory Indian warriors from La Florida, and after 1670, warfare between
English and Spaniards engaged in a contest for empire. By 1690, Guale vil-
lages along the Georgia coast and sea islands had been abandoned and the
surviving residents relocated to three Mocama missions within fifty miles
of St. Augustine. The once numerous Timucua from Potano and along the
St. Johns River had also suffered drastic demographic decline and been re-
located to mission centers along the road from St. Augustine to Apalachee.
As the demographic decline continued, the annual levy of laborers sent
· 112 ·
Raids, Sieges, and International Wars · 113
proof
Castillo de San Marcos, St. Augustine, Florida. Courtesy of the National Archives, Kew,
England.
to St. Augustine by the local chiefs bore more heavily on the surviving men
in the vil ages. The burden intensified after Jamaica was conquered by Eng-
lish forces in 1655. Fearing an attack on La Florida, Governor Diego de Re-
bolledo demanded that 500 Apalachee and Timucua warriors be sent to St.
Augustine, which led to a Timucua rebellion. By the time it was suppressed,
many alienated mission Indians had migrated north of Spanish-controlled
zones to join with the Apalachicola and Yamassee, who would later be
known as the Lower Creek.
La Florida was victimized by hurricanes, drought, and severe food
shortages, as wel as raids by Native Americans and attacks by pirates. In
1668, Captain Robert Searles led a band of 100 murderous buccaneers on a
midnight raid through the streets of St. Augustine. While Spanish soldiers
fled to the woods or cowered in the fort, the raiders plundered houses and
churches, kil ed sixty persons in the streets, and kidnapped women and
children for ransom. Alarmed by the escalating violence, the viceroy of New
Spain at Mexico City sent additional soldiers to the garrison and authorized
114 · Daniel L. Schafer
funds for a stone fort to protect St. Augustine. Construction began in fall
1672, but the Castillo de San Marcos was not completed until 1695.
Even before construction began, a greater threat to the survival of La
Florida occurred approximately 215 miles north of St. Augustine. In April
1670, acting under authorization of a charter granted by Charles II, the True
and Absolute Lords and Proprietors of Carolina established a colony of 130
English men and women on the Ashley River, today at Charleston. English
colonials from Barbados followed, bringing enslaved Africans with them.
By 1690, they had accomplished what the Spanish at La Florida were unable
to do in two centuries of colonial rule: establish a permanent and expand-
ing base of settlers with a prospering economy based on cattle, naval stores,
cultivation of rice, and exports of deerskins obtained in trade with Native
Americans.
The Carolina colonists’ interaction with Native Americans had a debili-
tating impact on Spanish Florida. Seeking to advance beyond their initial
coastal settlements, the Carolina leaders took advantage of traditional hos-
tilities between the natives of the region, providing trade goods and firearms
to one group of Native Americans and encouraging them to attack another.
The Westoes of Savannah River attacked and destroyed the coastal Indians
and opened the way for inland expansion of English settlements. By 1680,
proof
however, it was the Westoes who were standing in the way. English traders
therefore struck alliances with the Apalachicola and Yamassee and encour-