Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
ritory between Carolina and Florida. In the past, Carolina had claimed that
their charter set the southern boundary at the thirty-first paral el, or just
north of St. Augustine. Later, Carolina insisted that the border was even far-
ther south, seventy miles beyond St. Augustine at Mosquito Inlet. The 1670
Treaty of Madrid, however, established the boundary much farther north, at
the current line between South Carolina and Georgia, but the English colo-
nists refused to comply with the treaty. The construction in 1721 of Fort King
George on the Altamaha River was viewed as provocative by the Spaniards,
who sent Native American auxiliaries to attack the fort in 1722. The attack
was unsuccessful, but the unhealthiness of the site led to abandonment of
the fort in 1727.
James Edward Oglethorpe, an original trustee and resident founder of
Georgia, advocated aggressive military expansion to protect the British
colonies from attacks by the Spanish. Oglethorpe ordered construction of a
series of fortifications on the coastal islands, starting at Fort Frederica on St.
proof
Simons Island and extending as far south as the St. Johns River. In June 1736,
Oglethorpe ordered Fort St. George constructed on Fort George Island, on
north bank of the St. Johns near its merger with the Atlantic. He left a small
garrison in place overlooking a Spanish lookout on the opposite (south)
bank of the river and returned to St. Simons Island.
Rather than go to war, Spain sought a diplomatic solution. In the mean-
time, a military engineer and cartographer, Antonio de Arredondo, assessed
British strength and inspected Spanish defenses throughout Florida. He was
appalled by the tiny palmetto hut that served as a lookout post at the en-
try to the St. Johns, and by the absence of defense posts farther upriver.
Arredondo urged the Council of the Indies to authorize construction of
additional forts and to send more ships and sailors and an additional 800
soldiers for the St. Augustine garrison. Under Arredondo’s supervision,
improvements were made to the earthwork defenses and town wal s at St.
Augustine, the forts at St. Augustine and St. Marks, and the small wooden
blockhouses west of St. Augustine—Fort Picolata on the east and Fort San
Francisco de Pupo on the west of the St. Johns River. With the exception of
the Castillo de San Marcos, however, Spanish defenses were still woeful y
inadequate.
Raids, Sieges, and International Wars · 121
James Edward
Oglethorpe, gov-
ernor of Georgia,
1733–42. Oglethorpe
led unsuccessful
invasions of Spanish
Florida in 1740 and
1743. Courtesy of
the State Archives
of Florida,
Florida
Memory
, http://
proof floridamemory.com/
items/show/6278.
The weakness of Spain’s defensive network in Florida became dramati-
cal y evident in 1739, when Britain declared war on Spain in what became
known as the War of Jenkins’ Ear. The war grew out of trade rivalries in
the Americas and was in its early phases fought primarily in the Caribbean
and South America. By 1742 it had evolved into a wider European conflict
known as the War of Austrian Succession. In North America, the war was
largely a conflict between the English at Georgia and the Spanish at Florida.
In January 1740, Oglethorpe sailed down the Inland Passage west of
Amelia, Talbot, and Fort George Islands to post British ships at the entrance
to the St. Johns and add men to his southern outpost at Fort St. George. He
then proceeded upriver (south on the St. Johns) to capture Forts Picolata
and Pupo, before returning to Frederica to form an army of Carolina and
Georgia regiments and Native American al ies. On May 20, the advance
force of Oglethorpe’s army encamped south of the entry to the St. Johns
and marched south toward St. Augustine. The first impediment encoun-
tered was Fort San Diego, a wooden stronghold built by the Sanchez and
122 · Daniel L. Schafer
Plat map, 640 acres north of St. Augustine surveyed for David Yeats, 1770, showing
paths that converge at the location of Fort Diego. British invaders from Georgia cap-
tured the fort in 1740. Image is from Treasury 77, Records of the Parliamentary Claims
proof
Commission, courtesy of the National Archives, Kew, England.
Espinosa families to protect their cattle herds from Creek raids. The two
families, allied by marriage, had migrated to Florida from Spain and Cuba
after 1670 and established ranches in the Diego Plains. Fort Diego delayed
the British advance for less than a day.
Two miles north of St. Augustine, Oglethorpe called a halt outside the
wal s of Gracia Real de Santa Teresa de Mose, one of the most unique settle-
ments in the North American colonies. Fort Mose was constructed in 1738
by free blacks who had, beginning in 1686, escaped from their owners in
Carolina and found refuge and freedom in Spanish Florida. Instructed in
the Catholic faith and employed in St. Augustine, the men had enrolled in
the militia to serve as scouts and defenders of the northern frontier. The
historian Jane Landers has careful y researched the history of Mose and its
leader and commander, Francisco Menéndez, an African-born man who
had fought alongside Native American warriors against the British during
the Yamassee War. Forewarned of the powerful British force approaching St.
Augustine, Governor Manuel de Montiano ordered the evacuation of Fort
Mose and brought its 100 residents inside the protective wal s of the Castillo
Raids, Sieges, and International Wars · 123
de San Marcos. Approximately 2,500 persons were crowded within those
wal s, short of provisions and hoping for resupply and reinforcement from
Cuba.
After inexplicably marching his men back and forth between St. Augus-
tine and the camp south of the St. Johns, Oglethorpe occupied Fort Diego
and Fort Mose. His soldiers skirmished with Spanish militia while British
ships patrolled offshore to block access to the Matanzas River. In late June,
Oglethorpe sent artillery to a camp north of St. Augustine inlet and estab-
lished a second artillery post on Anastasia Island across from the Castillo
de San Marcos. On June 24th, daily bombardments of the fort and town
commenced, but the shells fired by Oglethorpe’s artil ery batteries could
not breach the sturdy wal s of the Castillo. The wal s were constructed of
blocks of coquina, a soft and porous sedimentary rock composed of com-
pacted shells and mineral calcite quarried in mines on Anastasia Island.
The cannonbal s fired by the Georgia artillerists that struck the wal s of the
Castil o either bounced off or were absorbed by the soft coquina blocks.
Consequently, the siege settled into a lengthy stalemate.
On June 25, Governor Montiano ordered a nighttime attack on the Scot
Highlanders garrisoned at Fort Mose. Free black militia men played a lead-
ing role in the daring recapture of their town, kil ing or capturing most
proof
of the defenders. Oglethorpe foolishly demanded a Spanish surrender, for
which he received a curt and immediate refusal. Governor Montiano was
encouraged by the victory at Mose and recognized the uplift in morale that
it provided for the Spaniards inside the fort, yet he was deeply worried that
unless he received a resupply of provisions, he would eventual y be forced
to either surrender or watch the Spanish defenders die of starvation.
He would not have to make that decision. On July 6, seven Spanish ships
arrived at Mosquito Inlet with flour and other provisions that were off-
loaded to smaller vessels. In daring runs up the Matanzas Inlet through a
gauntlet of British fire, the Spanish ships managed to deliver their valuable
cargoes to the Castillo. Montiano also received a troop reinforcement that
brought the number of soldiers under his command to 1,300. Oglethorpe,
although he commanded 2,000 men, acknowledged the invincibility of the
Castillo’s wal s and commanded his troops to begin an orderly withdrawal
and return to Georgia. By July 20, the last of the British soldiers and artillery
had been withdrawn. Oglethorpe, anticipating a retaliatory attack, began
preparing defenses in Georgia.
That attack was delayed almost two years, until July 1742, when Spanish
ships landed 400 men from Florida and 1,300 from Cuba at the south end
124 · Daniel L. Schafer
of St. Simon’s Island. Marching north toward Frederica through unfamiliar
and swampy terrain, the Spanish soldiers suffered serious casualties in an
ambush that became known as the Battle of Bloody Marsh. The survivors
were reembarked on transports and withdrawn from the area, marking the
end of Spanish incursions into the contested territory between Florida and
Georgia.
Oglethorpe would make one more effort to drive the Spaniards from
Florida. In 1743, he crossed the St. Johns with a force of Georgia rangers and
Indian allies, and looted and burned Fort Diego and other Spanish settle-
ments during the advance southward. The goal of the 1743 invasion was not
to breach the wal s of the Castillo or to capture St. Augustine, but to punish
Spaniards and enhance the reputation of an inexperienced and minimal y
successful military leader.
After the withdrawal of Oglethorpe’s army in 1743, Florida experienced
two decades without invasions or Indian raids. These were not easy or pros-
perous times, but the era of Native American rebel ions had ended along
with the Franciscan missions. Small vil ages of Indians of several different
ethnic identities surrounded the wal s of St. Augustine. The few friars who
remained in the province were assigned to Nombre de Dios, the free black
town of Mose, and the portage vil age of Tolomato, where the residents
proof
still transported cargoes embarked at wharfs in St. Augustine over the land
bridge separating the North and San Pablo Rivers, from where they were
floated north to the St. Johns. Persistent shortages of provisions and the
failure of subsidies from Spain often left Governor Montiano desperately
searching for subsistence for the garrison and the town. To fil the need,
Montiano implemented an admiralty court and licensed privateers to prey
on ships of nations that, until 1848, were still at war with Spain.
Montiano and other pragmatic Florida governors, aware that they were
violating Spanish mercantile trade restrictions, also negotiated trade agree-
ments with a British merchant in Charleston, John Gordon, and another in
New York, William W. Walton, to provide provisions for the garrison and
town residents in times of great need. Charles Hicks, an employee of W. W.
Walton and Company of New York, resided in St. Augustine as early as 1735.
His apprentice clerk, Jesse Fish, arrived as a teenager and remained in St.
Augustine for the next half century.
The Sanchez and Espinosa families survived Creek raids and the Ogletho-
rpe invasions, and by the mid-1740s were reviving their cattle ranches and
farm fields in the Diego Plains, twenty miles north of St. Augustine. West of
the town, near the St. Johns, the Solana family was doing the same. With the
Raids, Sieges, and International Wars · 125