Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
1812, a naval attack on the black and Indian fort and settlement at Prospect
Bluff on the Apalachicola River in 1815, and Andrew Jackson’s devastating
raids against Seminole vil ages along the Suwannee in 1818. The same U.S.
hostility toward free blacks living among the Seminole, and the Seminole
refusal to return their allies and family members to slavery, contributed to
the three Seminole wars from 1818 to 1858.
Florida’s black troops were able to slow but not stem the tide of U.S. ex-
pansionism. When Spain final y turned Florida over to the officials of the
U.S. territorial government in 1821, it did not abandon its free black citizens.
As in Louisiana, cession treaties required that the legal status and property
rights of free blacks be respected by the incoming government. Some free
blacks, like Prince Witten and Edimboro Sánchez, who had won his free-
dom despite the protests of his former owner, had acquired property and
invested years of hard work in improving it. They decided to stay in Florida
and risk trusting the newcomers to honor their treaty promises. But Prince’s
proof
daughter, María, and Edimboro’s daughter, Nicolasa, joined their husbands
and most of the free black community in a second exodus to Cuba. Like
their predecessors in 1763, these exiles received government assistance as
they remade their lives in Cuba.
Meanwhile, African Americans who had made their free lives among the
Seminole rather than among the Spanish were still at risk from the incom-
ing Americans, who brought with them chattel slavery and a firm convic-
tion of their racial superiority. These new homesteaders had long objected
to the free blacks living in Florida, fearing their militancy, their al iance
with Native Americans, and the dangerous example they set for plantation
slaves. Finding the racial climate in Florida increasingly restrictive, more
free blacks from St. Augustine left for Cuba in the American territorial
years, and in 1857 another community of free blacks living in Pensacola
departed for México.
These new migrations underscored the fact that Florida was an extension
of the Caribbean, where Native Americans, Europeans, and Africans had
interacted for centuries. Embroiled in the struggles of the European “su-
perpowers” of their day, Africans in Florida and in the circum-Caribbean
became adroit at reading the political tides. They were pragmatic diplomats,
Free and Enslaved · 193
shifting al egiances when they saw the need. In some areas of the South-
east their strategic advantage lasted well into the eighteenth century, and in
Florida it ended only when the region became part of the American South
in the nineteenth century. Historians Daniel Schafer and Canter Brown Jr.
have shown that even then Spanish legal traditions and customs left an im-
print in northeastern Florida that blunted some of the more restrictive and
punitive aspects of territorial race legislation.
Free and enslaved Africans helped shape international geopolitics in the
Southeast for more than three centuries before slavery was final y abolished
in Florida, yet their existence and their impact has been obscured by tradi-
tional historiography. As new historical and archaeological investigations
are determining, African Americans exercised more important and varied
roles in the colonial history of the Spanish frontiers of the United States than
has previously been appreciated. These studies make it clear that no history
of Florida, or the Southeast, is complete without considering this complex
and multidimensional African experience.
Notes
1. Fernando Miranda to the King, 20 August 1583, cited in Verne E. Chatelain,
The
proof
Defenses
of
Spanish
Florida,
1565–1763
(Washington: Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1941), p. 138.
2. Royal edict, 7 November 1693, Santo Domingo 58-1-26 in the John B. Stetson Col-
lection, P. K. Yonge Library of Florida History, University of Florida, Gainesville (hereafter
cited as PKY).
3. Fugitive Negroes of the English plantations to the King, 10 June 1738, SD 844, on
microfilm reel 15, PKY.
4. Letter of Alexander Semple, 16 December 1786, “To and from the United States,
1784–1821,” on microfilm reel 41, EFP, PKY. According to this letter, Prince had attempted
twice before to escape.
5. J. H. Alexander, “The Ambush of Captain John Williams, U.S.M.C.: Failure of the
East Florida Invasion,”
Florida
Historical
Quarterly
56, no. 3 (July 1977):286.
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Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1992.
194 · Jane Landers
Landers, Jane. “Africans in the Land of Ayl ón: The Exploration and Settlement of the
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Darien, Ga.: Lower Altamaha Historical Society, 1992.
———. “An Examination of Racial Conflict and Cooperation in Spanish St. Augustine:
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El
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———. “Gracia Real de Santa Teresa de Mose: A Free Black Town in Spanish Colonial
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proof
12
Florida’s Seminole
and Miccosukee Peoples
Brent R. Weisman
Origins
The Native Americans that today compose Florida’s Seminole and Miccosu-
kee tribes have roots deep in the cultural prehistory of southeastern North
America. The modern political division between the two tribes, dating for-
proof
mal y only to the 1950s, belies their fundamental cultural similarity and
shared historical origin in the lower piedmont of present-day Georgia and
Alabama. Here dwel ed the Creeks, Yuchis, and other related groups, the
immediate cultural ancestors of the Indians to be known in Florida as
cim-
marones
. This word, of Spanish origin, meant in the usage of the time people
separate from, or apart from, their major ancestral population center. In the
native Muskogean tongue, the Spanish word became “Seminole,” forms of
which were in use in British Florida by 1765. The transformation of Creek
into Seminole is the story of both cultural adaptation to the environmental,
political, and economic conditions of a rapidly globalizing world and the
cultural persistence of ancient customs and beliefs deeply seated in place
and time.
The foundations of both Creek and Seminole culture lie in the aboriginal
mound-building chiefdoms of the lower Southeast. By the tenth century
A.D., or C.E., such societies were presided over by hereditary chiefs and a
priestly elite who resided in formal towns consisting of temple and residen-
tial mounds arranged around a central plaza. Much of the populace lived
in the surrounding countryside in small farming hamlets on the banks of
streams or tributary creeks. Society was divided into matrilineal clans, that
· 195 ·
196 · Brent R. Weisman
is, clan membership was determined through the mother’s line. In this sys-
tem, a man’s sons were not members of his clan, nor could they inherit to
him. Instead, he had a set of responsibilities and obligations to his sister’s
sons, and they to him. Thus we see in Creek and early Seminole leadership
the succession of chiefly power from a man to his nephew. It is likely also
that the women and their families living together in the farming hamlets
shared clan membership. In the historic Creek period, these small maternal
clan groups were known as
huti,
while in Seminole society of the recent past
such groups were known as
istihapo
, or clan camps.
Creek religion stressed purity of mind and body, which was achieved
through the ritual use of tobacco, scratching or blood-letting, and imbib-
ing the “black drink,” a tea brewed from Ilex (hol y) leaves and other herbs,
to induce vomiting. Annual or seasonal ceremonies held in the plaza or
squareground emphasized community purity and solidarity. The most
important and enduring of these ceremonies was the Green Corn Dance,
or busk (from the Creek
poskita
, to fast), still practiced by the Creeks and
Seminoles today. This event, typical y lasting four days, consisted of sched-
uled social, political, and religious activities. Males and females, armed with
webbed ball sticks, played vigorously at the ball game. Boys would step up
to become young men through the naming ritual and puberty rites. Crimes
proof
were atoned for and grievances heard by the tribal council on Court day.
The medicine man would publicly examine the medicine bundle, then se-
crete it away until next year. Then there were the dances, in which the danc-
ers circled a ritual y prepared low mound of earth or moved in patterned
formation across the dance ground. Above al , the goal was to produce
harmony and a sense of well-being for both the individual and the larger
community.
The Creek cosmos, inherited from the Mississippian mound builders,
was shaped by beliefs associated with the four cardinal directions. The east,
for instance, associated with the rising sun, was thought to have beneficial
power. Mythical serpents, horned monsters, and other creatures had their
place in the Creek and Seminole cosmos. Colors also were given symbolic
meaning, with red being the color of war, and white associated with peace.
In daily life, the principal occupation of men was to hunt and make war.
Both activities usual y required small groups of men to be absent from their
households for extended periods of time, during which time the women
would tend garden plots, fish and gather plant foods available closer to
home, take care of the children, make pottery and clothing, and engage in
numerous other domestic tasks. Warfare was not the mass frontal assault
Florida’s Seminole and Miccosukee Peoples · 197
familiar to Europeans, but instead consisted of raids on the enemy. The re-
wards for personal bravery and stealth shown in such raids included in-
creased prestige among the warrior’s peers, the privilege to wear a tattoo,
and the opportunity for a young man to earn an adult, or warrior’s, name.
The coming of the Europeans to the interior Southeast, beginning with
the Spanish
conquistadores
in the mid-sixteenth century, had drastic and
far-reaching consequences for the aboriginal populations of the region. The
Creeks, possibly owing to their interior, buffered location, were spared im-