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Authors: Michael Gannon
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Pensacola, 1686–1763 · 139
In 1743, a Frenchman, Dominic Serres, serving as a seaman on a Spanish merchant
ship, made a drawing of the presidio on Santa Rosa Island, the only illustration of the
presidio that exists. The view is from the interior of the bay looking south. Notable
among the buildings shown is an octagonal-shaped church, the first such building in
Pensacola’s history. Serres later became famous as a seascape painter for King George
III of England.
manned by 200 soldiers, although it would be some time before that many
proof
were in place.
A new commandant, Colonel Miguel Román de Castil a y Lugo, reached
Pensacola in early 1757. En route from Veracruz, he had been shipwrecked
on Massacre (Dauphin) Island and had lost most of the supplies and some
of the troops he was bringing to Pensacola. The soldiers who survived in-
creased the garrison to about 150 men. By August 1757, that number had
grown to 180. Stil , the new location was in no condition to defend itself
in the event of Indian hostilities, which were expected any day. Román de
Castil a quickly set about building a new stockade and establishing other
defensive measures for the presidio.
The wal s of the new stockade, built of vertical pointed stakes, were soon
completed except for the one facing the water. The wal s eventual y mea-
sured 365 by 700 feet. Within the stockade were the government house, a
church, warehouses, barracks, bake ovens, and a brick house for the gover-
nor. Outside the stockade, seven or eight paces distant, was a single line of
dwellings for the civilians, officers, and married soldiers.
Except for periodic scares, Pensacola escaped attacks by hostile Indians
for several years after Román de Castil a arrived, despite the fact that the
French and Indian War swept the hinterland. During that time the number
140 · William S. Coker
of soldiers increased to 224, including two infantry companies and one of
light artillery. Even supplies and provisions arrived more frequently. By the
summer of 1760, however, conditions began to deteriorate.
In June, fear of an attack by unfriendly Indians prompted the governor to
clear the area around the stockade, destroying the houses and moving the
occupants into the fort. If the Indian menace was not enough, in August a
hurricane destroyed half of the stockade and blew the roofs off the houses.
The Spaniards were unable to secure new cypress bark, so Pensacola’s houses
went through the winter of 1760–61 without roofs.
The year 1761 was more trying. In February, the Alibama Indians attacked
the Spanish Indian vil age of Punta Rasa on Garçon Point, kil ing several
soldiers and resident Indians. Such attacks continued periodical y, and the
situation became so alarming that, in May, Román de Castil a moved the
friendly Yamasee-Apalachino Indians from the vil ages on Garçon Point
into the stockade. In June, the captain-general of Cuba dispatched two in-
fantry companies of
pardos
(mulattoes) commanded by Captain Vizente
Manuel de Zéspedes to Pensacola. In turn, some of the women from Pen-
sacola went to Havana, but about 200 women and children remained. For
the most part, the residents were confined to the stockade, although caval-
rymen did escort them to the nearby creek for water.
proof
Again, the French came to the rescue. In September, the governor of
Louisiana, Chevalier de Kerlerec, sent a representative, M. Baudin, to help
establish peace between the Indians and the Spaniards. Baudin succeeded,
and the peace accord was signed on 14 September 1761. The Indians agreed
to cease their attacks, and arrangements were made for an exchange of
prisoners.
The question of why the French were usual y successful in such negotia-
tions has a simple answer: They carried on an extensive trade with the In-
dians, while the Spaniards did not. The French traded guns and provisions
for deerskins and other furs, and if they stopped this exchange, the Indians,
heavily dependent upon such trade, would suffer. Thus the French exercised
great influence among the natives of the area. But for Spanish Governor
Román de Castil a, the French solution of the Indian problem came too late.
By the summer of 1761, officials in New Spain replaced the Pensacola
governor with an officer who was an experienced Indian fighter, Colonel
Diego Ortiz Parril a. Although opposed to his new assignment, he assumed
command on 21 October. The new governor was appal ed at the terrible
condition of the presidio. He accused Román de Castil a and some of the
other officers of gross mismanagement. He also believed Román de Castil a
Pensacola, 1686–1763 · 141
to be involved in illicit trade, which seemed to be confirmed when a British
ship belonging to William Walton & Co. arrived later that year. In addition,
Román de Castil a and some of the officers owned and operated stores in the
stockade which charged exorbitant prices for the goods sold. But the official
residencia, the investigation into the former governor’s conduct in office,
was still not complete by May 1762, when Román de Castil a left Pensacola.
For his part, Ortiz Parril a spent the next year and more rebuilding the
presidio and preparing its defenses in the event that the French and Indian
War should again reach Pensacola. Spain final y entered the war in 1762 as
an al y of France. As a result, France ceded Louisiana west of the Mississippi
River including the Isle of Orleans, to Spain. But Spain quickly lost Havana
to the British. When the war ended in February 1763, Spain exchanged La
Florida for Havana. Thus Pensacola became a British possession.
In June 1763, a British entrepreneur, James Noble, arrived at Pensacola.
He quickly purchased a number of town lots from the departing Spaniards.
He also bought all of the lands claimed by the Yamasee-Apalachinos, prob-
ably a mil ion or more acres, for $100,000. Later, this purchase from the
Indians was disallowed for a lack of proof of his claim.
Final y, on 6 August 1763, British Lieutenant Colonel Augustin Prevost
and accompanying troops reached Pensacola. He official y accepted its
proof
transfer to Great Britain from Spanish Colonel Ortiz Parril a. Al of the
Spaniards, with one exception, and all of the Yamasee-Apalachinos left for
Havana and Veracruz in early September. The British were happy with the
strategic location that they had acquired on the Gulf coast, but they were
sorely disappointed with its ruinous condition.
What had it cost the Spaniards to maintain Pensacola’s presidios from
1698 to 1763? Over 4.5 million pesos:
Presidio Santa Maria de Galve (1698–1719)
971,763 pesos
War of the Quadruple Alliance (1719–22)
1,070,284 pesos
Presidio Isla de Santa Rosa (1722–52)
572,505 pesos
Presidio San Miguel de Panzacola (1753–63)
435,826 pesos
Other expenses charged the presidios
1,515,442 pesos
Total
4,565,820
pesos
Excluding expenses for the war of 1719–22, the cost was divided into
salaries, 45.9 percent; provisions, 38.9 percent; fortifications, 4.7 percent;
materiél, 9.5 percent; other, 1.0 percent.
Spain had accomplished only half of its original objective in occupying
Pensacola. With the assistance of the French, it had prevented the British
142 · William S. Coker
This British plan of the harbor and settlement of Pensacola was made in the year 1763,
when Great Britain assumed rule over Florida. It contains a number of inaccuracies.
proof
from establishing a base on the Gulf of México for sixty-five years. But it
had not accomplished its other major purpose, the ouster of France from
Louisiana. The British victories accomplished that ouster, but they also cost
Spain Pensacola and all of La Florida.
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