Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
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province at peace, a few Spaniards were able to export oranges to Charleston
and to begin exploiting the forests for shipments of lumber and naval stores.
Smal numbers of Creek began moving into vacant lands near today’s
Tal ahassee that, prior to the 1704 invasion led by James Moore, had been
inhabited for centuries by thousands of Apalachee. Chief Tonaby settled a
vil age of approximately 300 Creek, and a larger vil age was located nearby
at Lake Miccosukee. Farther south, on the west bank of the Suwannee River
near the Gulf coast, a vil age of 300 to 400 Creek led by a chief known as
the White King was established in the late 1750s. These newly settled Creek
vil ages benefited from proximity to trade opportunities at the fort on the St.
Marks River, recently renovated and frequented by merchants who traveled
to St. Augustine and Havana.
Other Creek migrants came to the Alachua Savanna near the former
ranch of La Chua where cattle stil grazed wild in the grasslands. Chief Cow-
keeper and his brother Long Warrior had moved from the Chattahoochee
River in central Georgia circa 1750 to settle Cuscowil a (near present-day
Micanopy) with several hundred men, women, and children. The num-
bers of Creek migrants at Alachua and Apalachee were small at first, and
their early settlements may have been seasonal camps where Creek hunters
obtained skins to sell to European traders. By 1763, however, the seasonal
proof
habitations had become permanent towns. As Brent R. Weisman discusses
later in this volume, the migrants were in the process of transforming their
identity from Creek to Seminole.
After generations of failing to promote immigration to Florida, Spanish
officials final y brought 363 settlers from the Canary Islands to St. Augustine
in 1757. They settled on empty land north of the town between the Castillo
and Fort Mose. According to the historian Paul E. Hoffman, three hundred
more “Isleños” arrived the following year and settled outside the southern
wal of the town. The population of Florida was slowly increasing during the
years of peace following 1748, still concentrated on the east in the vicinity of
St. Augustine, and on the west at Apalachee and near the fort at St. Marks.
But the total number was miniscule in comparison to the thousands of in-
digenous Native Americans the Spaniards under Pedro Menéndez de Aviles
had encountered in Florida in 1565.
These promising signs of progress were endangered in January 1762,
when Spain once again declared war on England in the final year of the
Seven Years’ War (1756–63). It had been a massive international conflict
fought in Europe and the Americas, even in India and the Philippines. In
North America, it was known as the French and Indian War. Fears of Indian
126 · Daniel L. Schafer
raids originating in Georgia or Carolina were rekindled in St. Augustine, but
the significant military operations took place to the north and west of Flor-
ida. However, the trade arrangements that Spanish governors had worked
out with British colonial merchants in New York and Charleston were sus-
pended. Once again, licenses were issued to captains of privateer vessels,
and captured cargoes of vital provisions were unloaded at St. Augustine’s
wharfs.
The most important event of the Seven Years’ War, as far as Spanish res-
idents of Florida were concerned, was the capture of Havana by English
troops in August 1762. The war ended only a few months after Havana fel .
During peace negotiations, Spanish officials decided that restoration of the
rich sugar island of Cuba was more important than retaining Florida. In the
Treaty of Paris signed in February 1763, Florida was exchanged for Cuba.
The residents of Florida were told that the Crown would provide transporta-
tion to new homes in Cuba for colonists who departed St. Augustine within
thirteen months. With the exception of three families, all the Spanish resi-
dents of St. Augustine decided to say good-bye to Florida. Another eighty
families, possibly the last remnants of the Calusa Indians from southwest
Florida who had resettled near the fort at St. Marks, were transported to
Veracruz. The Creek who had recently migrated to Apalachee and the lower
proof
Suwannee remained. Englishmen who began arriving in July 1763 were al-
ready cal ing them “cimmarones,” for “runaways,” or people who moved
from their traditional vil ages to become Seminoles in Florida.
In
The
Oldest
City:
St.
Augustine,
Saga
of
Survival
, St. Augustine native Jean Parker Waterbury described the “transfer of an entire population out of
Florida to Cuba, some three thousand men, women and children, soldiers,
slaves, Indians and priests, Germans and Catalans, floridanos, Canary Is-
landers, free blacks, the mix which made up St. Augustine for so many de-
cades.” Thirteen hundred Spaniards left in August 1763; the others followed
four months later. Only the floridano families of Francisco Xavier Sanchez,
Manuel Solana, and Luciano de Herrera remained, along with a transplant
from New York named Jesse Fish whose roots in Florida reached back to the
1730s. He would find kindred spirits among the incoming English colonials
from Georgia and South Carolina, and the Scots, English, and Irish that
moved their families into the houses of the old Spanish city.
Raids, Sieges, and International Wars · 127
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St. Marys Region AD 1400–1700).” In
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8
Pensacola, 1686–1763
William S. Coker
The Sieur de La Sal e’s 1685 voyage to the Texas coast created near-panic
among the Spanish officials in New Spain (México). It also prompted Spain
to plant a colony on the northern Gulf coast, although some years passed
before it was done.
Eleven expeditions by land and by sea searched for the La Salle colony.
The first of the sea expeditions, that of Juan Enríquez Barroto and Antonio
Romero in 1686, examined the Bahía Santa María Filipina, the site of the
proof
Luna colony of 1559–61. The pilot, Ensign Juan Jordán de Reina, called the
bay “the best that I have ever seen in my life.” He also noted that the Indians
there referred to the bay as Panzacola, a Choctaw word that means “long
haired people,” because the men and women both wore their hair long.
This was not the earliest reference to Panzacola, also spelled Pansacola.
A 1657 report listed Pansacola as a satellite vil age of San Juan de Aspalaga
in the Apalachee area and the name of its cacique as Manuel. Pansacola was
also a common surname there. Interestingly, the natives who occupied the
Pansacola vil age in 1657 were Apalachee. It is believed that some Pansacola
were in that area at a much earlier period. There were also some Panzacola
in the Choctawhatchee and Mobile areas at a later date. But those met by
Jordán de Reina in 1686 were a separate tribe. Seven years later, in 1693,
Laureano de Torres y Ayala visited Pensacola Bay and found the Panzacola
vil age abandoned. He reported that these natives had been exterminated
by their mortal enemies, the Mobila. About 1725, some forty Panzacola and
Biloxi were living on the Pearl River, but whether they were survivors from
the Pensacola Bay vil age is unknown. Little is known about the Panzacola
natives after 1725.
· 128 ·
Pensacola, 1686–1763 · 129
Jordán de Reina’s glowing report of the Bahía de Panzacola prompted
officials to recommend a settlement there to prevent the French from oc-
cupying the bay. The viceroy sent Captain Andrés de Pez, one of the ad-
vocates of the Panzacola site, to Spain to obtain permission and support
for such a settlement. Because of Panzacola’s superior harbor, Pez recom-
mended abandoning San Agustin de la Florida (St. Augustine) and making
Panzacola the capital of La Florida. For only half of the money spent on St.
Augustine, 48,000 pesos annual y, he stated, Spain could maintain a fort
at Pensacola and have an excel ent harbor to go with it. In addition, the
Indians at Pensacola (the English spel ing) were ready to be converted to
Christianity.
The Council of War in Madrid disapproved Pez’s plan, but Carlos II, king
of Spain, ordered that Panzacola be settled without abandoning St. Augus-
tine. The council acquiesced but directed that first a scientific survey be
made of Pensacola Bay.
The viceroy sent two expeditions to Pensacola Bay in 1693. The first, by
sea, was headed by Admiral Pez, accompanied by Dr. Carlos de Sigüenza
y Góngora, a noted retired professor from the University of México, and
Captain Jordán de Reina. They rechristened the bay Bahía de Santa María
de Galve, for the Virgin Mary and the viceroy, the Conde de Galve. The
proof
only site still bearing a name given it in 1693 is Punta de Sigüenza (Point
Sigüenza), the western end of Santa Rosa Island. After their survey of the
bay, Sigfienza joined Pez as one of the staunchest supporters of a settlement
there.
Laureano de Torres y Ayala, governor-to-be of St. Augustine, com-
manded a land expedition that arrived at Pensacola Bay on 2 July 1693. His
report indicated that Pensacola was a good port that could easily be fortified
but that it lacked building stone.
As a result of these expeditions, a royal order issued on 13 July 1694 di-