Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
on Spain on 9 January 1719. Two days previously, the Company of the In-
dies had ordered the Sieur de Bienville, the governor of Louisiana, to take
possession of Pensacola. On 14 May, the French captured the recently built
battery on Point Sigüenza, then crossed the channel to Fort San Carlos de
Austria and engaged in a brief cannonade with the fort. Governor Juan Pe-
dro Matamoros de Isla, unaware that France and Spain were at war, quickly
surrendered.
The French took their Spanish prisoners to Cuba, where they planned
to leave them. But when they reached Havana, its commander, Captain
General Gregorio Guazo Calderón, refused to recognize the French flag
of truce on the grounds that the French had attacked Pensacola without
proper warning. The Spaniards prepared to recapture Pensacola, and Admi-
ral Alfonso Carrascosa de la Torre, commander of a Spanish fleet of twelve
ships and 1,800 men, reached Pensacola on 6 August. When the Spaniards
landed, about ninety French soldiers (the numbers vary) deserted to join
Pensacola, 1686–1763 · 135
them. The French officer in charge at the site, the Sieur de Châteaugué, Bien-
ville’s brother, still had about 200 soldiers under his command, but they put
up such a feeble defense he had no choice but to surrender. The Frenchmen
were sent to Cuba for imprisonment in Havana’s notorious Moro Castle.
When word reached Mobile that the Spanish fleet was at Pensacola,
French troops accompanied by several bands of Indians rushed there but
arrived too late. The Chevalier de Noyan, who commanded one of the
French-Indian forces, talked with Matamoros de Isla and learned that the
next Spanish objective was Mobile and Dauphin Island. Noyan quickly re-
turned to Mobile, and the French prepared to defend the area.
Part of the Spanish fleet led by Captain Antonio de Mendieta quickly set
sail for Dauphin Island. After twelve days and nights of frustrating efforts
to capture Dauphin Island, and without the arrival of expected assistance
from México, the Spaniards final y gave up and departed Mobile Bay on 25
August.
In early September, the French made plans to recapture Pensacola. Bien-
ville led a force of 400 Indians overland, while the recently arrived French
fleet under the command of Admiral Desnos de Champeslin left Mobile and
reached Pensacola on the sixteenth. Pensacola was well defended because
the Spanish
flota
from Havana was still there, but the naval battle that en-
proof
sued lasted only an hour before the Spaniards gave up. The reinforced Span-
ish battery at Point Sigüenza put up a stout defense but ran out of ammuni-
tion and surrendered. Matamoros de Isla at Fort San Carlos de Austria had
planned a strong defense, but fear of Bienville’s Indian warriors persuaded
him to give up without a fight.
The French sent 625 privateersmen and noncombatants back to Havana
in exchange for the French soldiers under Châteaugué. The soldiers and the
officers, including Matamoros de Isla, were taken as prisoners to Brest, in
France. When the Spaniards departed, the French permitted the Indians
to plunder the Spanish presidio. Forty-seven of the Frenchmen who had
surrendered to the Spaniards in August were court-martialed. Twelve were
hung, the others were sentenced to forced labor. Twelve French soldiers and
eight Indians were left at Pensacola under the command of the Sieur Delisle
with orders to give token opposition if the Spaniards returned. He was then
to destroy what was left of the fort and retreat to Mobile.
A long-awaited Spanish fleet from Veracruz, commanded by Admiral
Francisco de Cornejo, final y sailed for Pensacola but went instead to St.
Joseph’s Bay. There Cornejo was warned that Champeslin and his ships were
still at Pensacola. Fearful that he might not succeed in an attack upon the
136 · William S. Coker
French, Cornejo went to Havana to await reinforcements. Plans to recapture
Pensacola continued, but nothing was actual y done. By early 1720, peace
overtures were under way in Europe.
France planned to keep Pensacola under any circumstances, while Spain
demanded its return. For nearly a year they negotiated an end to the war.
Final y, France recognized that it would be impossible to obtain Spanish
cooperation unless Pensacola was restored to Spain, so, in the treaty of 27
March 1721, France gave up its claim.
Bienvil e received orders on 6 April 1722 to return Pensacola to Spain.
Lieutenant Colonel Alejandro Wauchope, the Spanish governor-to-be of the
Pensacola presidio, visited Mobile in June. He carried instructions for the
French to return Pensacola and all of the armament and supplies that were
there in 1719, but Bienvil e could not comply with the Spanish demands:
The Indians had destroyed virtual y everything in the presidio except some
cannon, which were buried in the sand.
After some delay, Wauchope reached Pensacola with three ships and an
infantry company. Wauchope (also written Wauchop) was a Scotsman who
had served in Spain’s Irish Brigade. He received possession of the site from
Lieutenant Jean Baptiste Rebue (also Reboul) on 26 November. All that re-
mained was one dilapidated cabin, a bake oven, and a lidless cistern.
proof
Wauchope’s orders cal ed for a canal to be dug across Santa Rosa Island to
lower the water level in Pensacola Bay to prevent large enemy ships of war
from entering the harbor. An engineer, Don José de Berbegal, accompanied
Wauchope to supervise the project. If it proved to be an impractical plan,
they were to move the presidio to Santa Rosa Island. The projected fort to
be built on Point Sigüenza was to be manned by 150 soldiers of infantry
and artillery but supplemented by the garrison from St. Joseph. In February
1723, Captain Pedro Primo de Rivera and men from St. Joseph’s Bay were
brought to Pensacola. By that date considerable progress had been made
in building the new Presidio Isla de Santa Rosa/Punta de Sigüenza about
three-quarters of a mile east of Point Sigüenza. The canal across the island
was not attempted.
The new presidio consisted of a church, warehouse, powder magazine,
quarters for the officers, barracks for the soldiers, twenty-four small build-
ings for the workmen, convicts, and others, a bake oven, a house for the
governor, and a look-out tower sixty feet high.
But for the Spaniards, troubles in Pensacola were far from over. Wau-
chope had the same basic problem that his predecessors confronted: Sup-
plies for the garrison were uniformly inadequate and late in arriving. Once
Pensacola, 1686–1763 · 137
more, Pensacola turned to its French neighbors for help. Bienville complied
with Wauchope’s plea for assistance and sent supplies from New Orleans to
Pensacola via Mobile. In spite of this help, Wauchope intended to observe
royal orders that directed that all contraband French goods arriving for sale
at Pensacola were to be burned and those involved punished.
In 1724, Wauchope complied strictly with these orders when a Madame
Olivier and others from Mobile visited Pensacola. The madame, it seems,
came to visit friends, while her companions brought some goods to sel . The
Spaniards seized and burned the boats including the merchandise and put
all the Frenchmen except Madame Olivier and her daughter in irons. This
was only one of several similar incidents.
If contraband trade was not enough, hostile Indians presented the Span-
iards with additional trouble. An attack upon Pensacola by the pro-English
Talapoosa in 1727 may well have spelled disaster for the Spaniards had it not
been for the Sieur de Perier, governor of Louisiana, who came to the rescue.
He warned the Talapoosa that, if they did not cease their attack upon the
Spanish presidio, he would turn loose a large force of Choctaw that would
destroy them. As a result, the Talapoosa lifted the siege and retreated from
Pensacola.
Illegal trade between the French and Spaniards could not be prevented,
proof
despite the best efforts of officers like Wauchope. In 1738, the Spanish sec-
retary of state wrote the viceroy of New Spain that he should take action
against the commandant and officers at Pensacola unless they stopped trad-
ing with the French. Such warnings had little effect, but one policy did affect
this trade. In 1743, Louisiana officials forbade French merchants at Mobile
and New Orleans to carry merchandise to Pensacola because the Spaniards
had not paid their outstanding debts. The Spaniards were thus forced to go
to New Orleans for their goods and to pay cash for them.
The year 1743 was important to Pensacola for reasons other than the trade
imbroglio. An artist’s sketch of the Santa Rosa Island presidio and orders
for a report on the remote outpost would be significant in the history of
Pensacola.
Dominic Serres, a Frenchman serving on a trading ship that visited Pen-
sacola in 1743, made the sketch of the presidio. He later became a seascape
painter in London. When the British learned that Florida was to be traded
to Great Britain in 1763, Serres’s drawing was published in William Roberts’s
Natural
History
of
Florida
(London, 1763). Several of the buildings are iden-
tified in the sketch, including the octagonal-shaped church. This drawing is
the only existing representation of the island presidio.
138 · William S. Coker
On 15 April, the viceroy in Mexico City directed Field Marshal Pedro de
Rivera y Vil alón to prepare a report on the Pensacola presidio. Rivera had
made an extended inspection of the presidios west of Louisiana some years
earlier, which had had a strong impact on those fortifications.
In the preparation of his Pensacola study he did not visit the site but
relied for his observations on the letters and recommendations of men who
had served there. In his report, dated 29 May 1744, Rivera briefly, and with
some errors, traced the history of Pensacola’s presidios and the ebb and
flow of the three-way struggle for Florida among France, Great Britain, and
Spain. He noted that the violent storms that had virtual y destroyed the pre-
sidio on several occasions were an ever-present danger. He also recognized
that, in the event of war, the presidio would easily fall prey to an attacking
force but that it would cost thousands of pesos to build a more suitable
fort, which would then require more manpower. In spite of its problems,
Rivera recommended retaining Pensacola but with a reduction in the size
of the garrison. He did not have a recommendation on whether the presidio
should remain on the island or be moved back to the mainland.
The only part of Rivera’s report that seems to have been implemented
was the reduction in manpower. In 1750, two companies of infantry were
stationed there, only sixty-two men with thirty-six fit for duty. The labor
proof
battalion had twenty-four men.
Sometime in the 1740s the Spaniards built a smal blockhouse on the
mainland which they named Fort San Miguel. Its purpose and that of
the smal detachment of soldiers stationed there was to help protect the
Yamasee-Apalachino Indians living nearby from attacks by British-al ied
Indians. Located in present-day downtown Pensacola, the little fort was
soon to be the site of Pensacola’s third presidio.
On 3 November 1752, a hurricane struck Santa Rosa Island. It destroyed
all of the buildings except a storehouse and the hospital. Nearly three years
later, a fort built of stakes, a warehouse for supplies, and another for gun-
powder were located on the site of the old presidio. Some distance to the
west were the church, hospital, commandant’s quarters, and a camp for the
garrison. In August 1755, the buildings were reported to be deteriorating.
The following summer, the Marqués de las Amaril as, the viceroy of New
Spain, ordered that the presidio be relocated to the site of Fort San Miguel
on the mainland and that it be named the Presidio San Miguel de las Ama-
ril as. A royal order of October 1757 changed the name to the Presidio San
Miguel de Panzacola. Although the area had long been familiarly known as
Panzacola, it was now official y so recognized. The new presidio was to be