Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
mediate extinction, although the effects of depopulation due both to intro-
duced disease and direct conflict with the Europeans and the movement of
towns did much to unsettle the traditional social structure. However, with
the arrival of British colonists, first on the Carolina coast and, by 1670, in
Georgia, the Creeks, by virtue of their location, assumed a pivotal position
in the trade networks opening up on the emerging colonial frontier. Deer-
skins, in great demand in Europe for making clothing, saddles, and other
items, passed from Indian hands to traders located at posts on the fal line or
on the coasts, while the Indians reaped iron tools and utensils, beads, coarse
“stroud” cloth, and guns and ammunition in the exchange. The Creeks were
quickly and deeply enmeshed in an expanding commercial economy. Mean-
while, in Florida, things had not gone well with the native tribes. The more
proof
populous groups—the Calusa of the southwest coast, the Timucua-speaking
peoples of the central interior, the Apalachee of the Panhandle—had borne
the brunt of the first encounters with the Spanish conquistadores beginning
early in the sixteenth century. Fol owing the establishment of St. Augus-
tine in 1565 by Pedro Menéndez de Avilés, the serious missionizing of the
Florida Indians began. After a failed Jesuit effort, Franciscan priests concen-
trated on the conversion of the surviving Timucua and Apalachee Indians of
north Florida. Besides the earnest desire on the part of the mission priests
to bring Catholicism to the natives, the Spanish colonial government in St.
Augustine looked upon the mission chain to provide a first line of defense
should the British decide to expand southward. When the inevitable push
did come, the smal , isolated mission settlements, most of which were not
garrisoned, could not hold. First in the 1680s, and then more seriously be-
tween 1702 and 1706, the Florida missions were assaulted by wel -armed,
British-backed Yamasees and Creeks, who swept some 1,000 Florida Indians
into plantation slavery on the rice coast of Carolina.
Despite the apparent good feeling between the British and the Creeks, in
1715 “Emperor” Brim of the Coweta Creeks attempted to organize a unified
strike against the British, French, and Spanish colonists in former Indian
198 · Brent R. Weisman
proof
Map showing locations mentioned in the text.
territory. When the first attack of the so-called Yamasee War failed, some
of the Creek towns moved from their former locations to avoid retaliation,
while these and other towns in the Lower Creek region of central Georgia
began a cautious realignment toward the Spanish in Florida. Taking advan-
tage of this turn in allegiance, in 1716, 1717, and 1718 the Spanish sent Diego
Pena among the Lower Creeks in an attempt to entice them to move to the
largely vacant Florida peninsula. A number of towns—Oconee, Yuchi, Sa-
wokli, Apalachicola—responded favorably to Pena’s offer, and the gradual
native repopulation of Florida was begun. Slowly, in the middle decades of
Florida’s Seminole and Miccosukee Peoples · 199
the eighteenth century, the old Apalachee area around present-day Tal ahas-
see, the Apalachicola drainage, the central Florida region surrounding the
great Alachua Savanna (Paynes Prairie), and, to a lesser extent, the rolling
uplands northeast of Tampa Bay, witnessed the transformation of Creek
into Seminole. With these peoples came languages new to the Florida pen-
insula. Hitchiti, ancestral to the Mikasuki language spoken by members of
the contemporary Seminole and Miccosukee tribes, could be heard in the
Alachua Savanna, Apalachicola, and Tal ahassee areas. Muskogee, or Creek,
today spoken on the Brighton Seminole reservation, was also to be heard in
some of the Tal ahassee towns and in the settlements above Tampa Bay.
Early Seminole history can be divided into two periods: Colonization
(1716–1767), the initial migrations of the Creek towns into Florida; and En-
terprise (1767–1821), the era of prosperity under British and Spanish rule of
Florida prior to the American presence.
Colonization (1716–1767)
The exact dates for the settlement of Florida by the Creeks are not certain,
nor are they likely to be, given the uneven documentation of the time. It
does not appear, however, that these first Florida towns virtual y replicated
proof
in architecture and social structure the Creek settlements to the north.
Squareground towns, notably at Latchua or Latchaway (on the rim of today’s
Paynes Prairie) and on the west bank of the Suwannee River in the vicinity
of Old Town (Dixie County) continued to be the hub of social and political
life. A squareground typical y consisted of four open pavilions at each side
of the square, one of them special y designated for the chief like Cowkeeper
of Latchaway and White King of the Suwannee town. In the central plaza of
the square was the dance circle. Red towns still battled White towns in the
bal game, as they had in Creek country, the peace pipe or calumet ceremony
still opened important proceedings, and the black drink (actual y known to
the Indians as the “white drink”) still purified both mind and spirit.
Although there was a basic continuity of the Creek culture pattern, there
was an increasing and purposeful separation by the Florida Indians from
the political affairs of their Creek counterparts to the north. In 1765, when
Governor James Grant of the British colonial government called the Creek
leaders together for the Picolata Congress, at which he hoped to gain from
them boundary concessions to land east of the St. Johns River, the shrewd
Cowkeeper was not in attendance, preferring to pay the governor a per-
sonal visit a month later. By Cowkeeper’s own testimony, he had little formal
200 · Brent R. Weisman
contact with the Creek leadership during the decade previous. Cowkeeper’s
case also il ustrates how difficult it is to characterize any aspect of Seminole
history with simple generality, for while he led his band of Oconees to settle
in Spanish Florida, he boasted of killing eighty-six Spaniards and hoped to
do away with more. Yet he seemed to have little use for the British in Florida
(although he was regarded as friendly), and little direct interest in Anglo-
Creek politics. Perhaps his strongest inclination was in maintaining a degree
of autonomy for his people. At St. Marks in the former Apalachee territory,
the Spanish established a trading post in 1745, hoping to lure neighboring
Lower Creeks into permanent settlement. For a time this was successful,
with the founding of Creek towns in the area under the overall leadership
of Secoffee, the son of Brim. However, the Spanish had difficulty provision-
ing the store to meet demand as the quantity of deerskins brought in far
surpassed their expectation. Indian restlessness grew in this part of Spanish
Florida.
The archaeological remains, what few there are that can be confidently
dated to the colonization period, show a strong continuity of Creek material
culture. Pottery vessels, the best collection of which is from the Suwannee
River, are of the same form and function as similarly dated Creek vessels,
and bear the same “brushed” surface treatment and styles of rim decora-
proof
tion. Trade goods found, such as razors, knives, gun parts, glass beads, silver
cones and earrings, buckles, and horse tack indicate full participation in the
trade economy.
As the native involvement in trade intensified, and as tensions between
Indian, Anglo, French, and Spanish on the colonial frontier continued to
mount, the underpinnings of traditional Creek society began, slowly at first,
to give way. The power of hereditary leadership began to diminish as trad-
ers plied the interior looking to make deals with whomever they could. As
social y sanctioned warfare became an unacceptable means for young men
to gain their manhood because of the turbulence and disruption it caused
for the colonists, gangs of mounted warriors roamed the frontier looking
for opportunities to test their bravery and courage. Such was the temper of
Indian Florida when the British gained control in 1763 in accordance with
the terms of the Treaty of Paris. By the end of British rule twenty-one years
later, it could be said that there were no longer any Creeks in Florida, only
Seminoles.
Florida’s Seminole and Miccosukee Peoples · 201
The Period of Enterprise (1767–1817)
Despite their overall administrative prowess, the British in Florida seemed
ill-prepared to deal with increasingly complex question of Indian trade and
land rights. Through a series of conferences with the Creeks set to clarify
these concerns, at Augusta in 1763, St. Marks in 1764, and Picolata in 1765,
John Stuart, Indian agent for the Southern District, became aware of in-
creasing Indian dissatisfaction and demands relating to trade and of the
emerging separateness of the Seminole from Creek. Specific treaty nego-
tiations also imply that there was separateness, perhaps even antagonism,
between the Alachua and St. Marks settlements. Although the beginning
date for the period of enterprise could be set at 1763, when Great Britain
took possession of Florida, by 1767 Anglo-Indian relations were relatively
stable and the term “Seminole” or some derivative thereof was coming into
common use. In between the lines, to judge from Stuart’s letters of 1767, this
term was used to designate those natives of Creek origin living beyond the
control and reach of the Creek Confederacy and was understood to mean
“wild people” more than “runaway.”
This was a time of tremendous radiation of the Seminoles across the Flor-
ida landscape and, of course, a great increase in their numbers. In addition
proof
to the Cowkeeper’s Alachua Seminoles, now settled at Cuscowil a, major
towns were found at Talahasochte on the Suwannee River, on the St. Johns
River near present-day Palatka, and Chukochatty near present-day Brooks-
ville. By 1774, nine substantial towns, most, if not al , with squaregrounds,
were present in the Florida; by 1821, this number had increased fourfold. In
the old Apalachee area, major vil ages were located at Mickasuki (also cal ed
Newtown), and Tal ahassee.
The impetus for this Seminole expansion was trade. Using fire drives and
firearms obtained by trade of direct gift, Indian hunters took large numbers
of deer for the skin trade, ranging far south to the Everglades. For 18 pounds
of skins a hunter could obtain a new gun; for 60 pounds (a not unrealistic
take in a good year) a new saddle could be had. The British “one trader–one
town” policy, designed to prevent competitive traders from unduly promot-
ing vil age factionalism, had the unintended effect of stimulating the forma-
tion of new towns. Not all the Seminoles supplied to the traders came from
the forest. Particularly in the fertile uplands east and northeast of Tampa
Bay, plantation agriculture developed. Corn, rice, watermelons, peaches,
potatoes, and pumpkins grown in plantation fields were taken to St. Augus-
tine to provision the perpetual y needy citizens of that city.
202 · Brent R. Weisman
Using large, seaworthy canoes, Seminoles from the Suwannee towns and
from a town at the head of today’s Charlotte Harbor traveled to Spanish
Cuba to trade in the hope of getting better prices than those offered by the
British. However, when Spain again took possession of Florida in 1783 fol-
lowing the American Revolution, trading houses established under British
rule were encouraged to remain by Governor Zespedes to ensure conti-
nuity in trade relations. The leader of the Creek Confederacy, Alexander
McGillivray, attempted to promote peaceful conditions among the Creeks
and Seminoles and the Spanish by nurturing the Indian trading company
of Panton and Leslie, while fending off increasing pressure from the en-
croaching Americans. But peace in Spanish Florida was not to be. Tensions
mounted between the Florida Seminoles and the new American residents
of Georgia, and armed conflict, to be detailed in the next section, erupted