Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
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one at the Madira Bickel Mound State Archaeological Site.
Smal , triangular stone points were used by the Safety Harbor people to
tip arrows. Similar points—suggesting bow and arrow use—are common in
the contemporary Fort Walton, Suwannee Valley, and Alachua cultures in
northern Florida.
The colonial-period Uzita, Mocoso, Pohoy, Tocobaga, and possibly the
Ocale Indians all were Safety Harbor groups, and at least some of them—
those living from Tampa Bay north—spoke Timucua. Like other north
Florida native societies, all of these people of the Tampa Bay region people
were in contact with Spanish expeditions in the sixteenth century.
The lifeways of the various regional cultures of southern Florida also were
well established by 500 B.C., the end of the late Archaic period. Although
some beliefs and symbols were shared with the agricultural cultures farther
north in Florida, the nature of the south Florida precolumbian cultures re-
flects their reliance on coastal and freshwater wetlands for their subsistence.
The vast savannah around Lake Okeechobee, cal ed by Florida natives
Lake Mayaimi, was the home of the Belle Glade culture. By as early as 400
B.C., shortly after the end of the late Archaic period, the Belle Glade peoples
evidently grew small amounts of maize. But the practice seems to have been
14 · Jerald T. Milanich
abandoned by A.D. 500 or so, possibly because of increasingly wet condi-
tions. The Bel e Glade peoples built a remarkable series of vil ages, each
containing mounds and earthen embankments and other earthworks, some
in geometric shapes. They also dug ditches and canals. One such complex
site is Fort Center in Glades County, where numerous wooden carvings of
animals were found preserved in a pond.
Belle Glade vil agers continued to live around the lake and in the Kissim-
mee River drainage into early colonial times. The wetlands and savannahs
provided them with a rich assortment of fish, birds, turtles, al igator, and
other animals, as well as plants. The Belle Glade culture was one of the most
distinctive in all of Florida.
Along the mangrove coasts and estuaries of southeast Florida, the coasts
of the Ten Thousand Island region, and the coast of Monroe County north
of the Florida keys, a distinctive regional culture developed. Hunter-gather-
ers, these Glades culture people lived by fishing, gathering shel fish, and col-
lecting plants and other animals. Numerous Glades sites also are found in
the Everglades and other areas of interior Florida south of the Okeechobee
Basin.
Glades archaeological sites once blanketed the shores of the Florida Gold
Coast; where huge precolumbian shell heaps once dotted Biscayne Bay, to-
proof
day there are high-rise buildings. Scattered sites are stil visible in a few
places, such as along the Miami River.
At Key Marco, a site on Marco Island excavated in the late nineteenth
century, archaeologists recovered nets, net floats, and other fishing gear
along with beautiful y carved and painted wooden masks and animal figu-
rines and depictions, providing us with a glimpse into the rich culture of
these precolumbian coastal dwellers. These southern Florida native peoples
used bows and arrows along with a variety of other tools made of shell and
wood. Stone is not as common in southern Florida as it is farther north, and
the precolumbian peoples used other raw materials for their artifacts.
In Dade County, the colonial-period descendants of the Glades popula-
tions were the Tequesta natives. To the north were groups like the Boca
Ratones and Santaluces, names given the natives by the Spaniards.
Another coastal-oriented culture, the Caloosahatchee, occupied the
southwest coast from Charlotte Harbor south into Collier County. The larg-
est shell mounds in Florida are found there today, as well as large and small
shell heaps on nearly every coastal island and the adjacent mainland, espe-
cial y in Charlotte Harbor, Pine Island Sound, and San Carlos Bay.
Original Inhabitants · 15
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Aerial photograph showing the linear embankments and other earthworks, including
a circular ditch, at Fort Center, a Belle Glade culture archaeological site in the Lake
Okeechobee Basin. The site covers approximately one mile along the creek bank
(
north is to the right
).
The extensive shell middens contain the remains of hundreds of thou-
sands of native meals: fish, sharks, oysters,
Busycons,
and other mol usks.
The size and contents of the mounds attest to the antiquity of the Indian
cultures of the region and their reliance on marine resources.
The Caloosahatchee peoples, ancestors of the Calusa Indians, also built
mounds of shel and earth to serve as the bases for temples. They dug ditches
and canals similar to those of the Lake Okeechobee Basin, a region to which
they were connected by the Caloosahatchee River, a canoe highway.
16 · Jerald T. Milanich
These were the major native cultures of precolumbian Florida. When
Juan Ponce de León sailed the coastline in 1513, the native population num-
bered 350,000, including 50,000 Apalachee, 150,000 Timucua speakers, and
150,000 other people in the western Panhandle and central and southern
Florida. But as we shall see in subsequent chapters, the European presence
brought diseases and slaving raids that severely reduced and ultimately de-
stroyed Florida’s original inhabitants. By the late eighteenth century, they
were no more.
Bibliography
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Harney
Flats:
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Farmingdale, N.Y.: Baywood Publishing, 1987.
Doran, Glen H., and David N. Dickel. “Multidisciplinary Investigations at the Windover
Site.” In
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edited by B. A. Purdy, pp. 263–89. Caldwel , N.J.: Telford
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Dunbar, James S. “Resource Orientation of Clovis and Suwannee Age Paleoindian Sites in
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pp. 185–213. Corvallis: Center for the First Americans, Oregon State University, 1991.
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Museum of Natural History, 1992.
Milanich, Jerald T.
Archaeology
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Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1994.
———.
Florida
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Original Inhabitants · 17
Purdy, Barbara A.
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———
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Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1981.
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2
First European Contacts
Michael Gannon
The first encounters between the indigenous peoples of Florida and the Eu-
ropeans who traveled the Atlantic in the wake of Christopher Columbus
occurred nearly five centuries ago. The documents and maps are unclear
on the point, but it appears that the initial contacts preceded the famous
voyage of Juan Ponce de León in 1513 by a number of years. After the turn
of the sixteenth century, Spain launched an ever-widening circle of voyages
from bases in the Caribbean Sea. Some of those were slaving expeditions in
search of island natives to replace the native laborers of La Española and,
proof
later, the Isla de Cuba, where, owing to the Spaniards’ introduction of harsh
work practices and European diseases, indigenous populations were rap-
idly col apsing. Probably one or more of those expeditions happened upon
the Florida peninsula, which may account for the hostility that the natives
demonstrated toward Juan Ponce upon his arrival there, as well as for his
discovery on the lower Gulf coast of “an Indian who understood the Span-
iards.” In any event, the historian can speculate what must have been the
wonderment, perhaps terror, that passed through the original Floridians’
minds when they beheld the ultimate artifact of European technology, the
sailing ship, with its huge hul , masts and shrouds, spread canvas sails, and
white, bearded seamen.
Tantalizing suggestions of those first contacts appear in maps and charts
as early as 1502, the date of a Portuguese world map known by the name of
its owner, Italian nobleman Alberto Cantino. Where it depicted the Span-
ish Caribbean discoveries, there appears a narrow landmass that is possibly
the Florida peninsula but is more likely the coast of Central America. More
striking, a map of the islands and shores of the New World was published in
1511 by Peter Martyr (Pietro Martire d’Anghiera), an Italian priest-humanist
in the Spanish court of Fernando II of Aragón. Drawn from oral and written
· 18 ·
First European Contacts · 19
reports of navigators, this map shows a long shoreline “to the north” of Cuba
which he labeled “Isla de beimeni parte” (Island of Bimini). With the Grand
Bahama Bank directly abutting them, the land features of Bimini, and what
appear to be keys descending from them, could be Florida.
It was this island of Bimini that Juan Ponce de León was authorized to
seek in an
asiento
(charter) issued him by the Spanish Crown on 23 Febru-