Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
entry and exit of numerous third parties, the commission determined that
the Seminoles should be awarded a little more than $12 mil ion for lands
taken in the 1820s and 1830s at less than market value. Unfortunately, the
commission failed to specify how the money was to be divided among the
Seminole, Miccosukee, and Oklahoma Seminole Tribes. After an appeal by
proof
the Seminoles, the commission awarded the tribes $16 million in 1976 but
did not resolve the distribution problem. In 1990, twenty years after the
initial award, Congress mandated a 75/25 split of the $50 million settlement
(the 1976 award plus interest) between the Oklahoma and Florida Semi-
noles. The Florida share, amounting to some $12.3 million, was divided be-
tween the Seminole tribe (77.2 percent), the Miccosukees (18.6 percent),
and independent Seminoles, legal y recognized ful -blooded Indians who
are not tribal members (4.6 percent).
The Seminole Tribe, based at the Hol ywood Reservation, is governed by
an elected tribal council representing each of the reservations and, through
its corporate branch, engages in many sophisticated and complex business
ventures. The smaller Miccosukee Tribe—organized similarly to the Semi-
nole Tribe—conducts tribal business from its headquarters on the Tamiami
Trail reservation. In recent years, both tribes have made bold forays into the
world of high-stakes gaming.
Too frequently the Seminoles and Miccosukees have been defined in the
public mind by popular media reports on legal battles with state or federal
authorities over gaming, land- and water-use rights, and the civil rights of
citizens of Indian nations. Federal law recognizes the sovereign status of
218 · Brent R. Weisman
designated Indian tribes and nations, but sovereignty as both a political
and civil concept is not well understood at the state and local governmental
levels. The Seminoles, Miccosukees, and many other Indian nations have
used their sovereign status to build economic self-sufficiency through the
sales of tax-free cigarettes and bingo revenues. The Seminole Tribe in par-
ticular parlayed these revenues into surprising political clout and bold fi-
nancial investments. In 2006, the Seminole Tribe purchased the Hard Rock
Corporation. The $965 mil ion deal included 124 Hard Rock Cafes, four
Hard Rock Hotels, two Hard Rock Casinos (already doing business on res-
ervation property in Tampa and Hol ywood), and a variety of subsidiary
enterprises. Although most of the tribal revenue comes from gaming, more
conventional pursuits such as cattle ranching, particularly on the Brigh-
ton reservation (where it has become a multimillion-dol ar enterprise), and
growing lemons, grapefruits, and oranges have added to the diversified eco-
nomic portfolio. In 2009, the Seminole Tribe negotiated a compact with the
State of Florida for initial payments of $150 mil ion per year to state cof-
fers in exchange for exclusive rights to offer blackjack and slot machines at
tribal casinos. Negotiations such as these often polarize public opinion and
encourage misconceptions about the integrity of Seminole culture. To the
Seminoles, however, there are no misconceptions. The economic success of
proof
their gaming enterprise underwrites the survival of their cultural identity.
They can continue to be Seminoles because they have found a viable way to
maintain their independence. They take pride in their self-designation as
the “Unconquered People,” an homage to their survival through the era of
the Seminole wars.
Although modern ranch-style houses with manicured lawns have largely
replaced the standard reservation-style concrete block house, which largely
replaced the traditional chickee, and Christianity has been long since ac-
cepted, much remains of traditional Seminole culture. In early summer,
dance grounds are prepared for the annual Green Corn Dance, directed
by a tribal medicine man, much as was done in the nineteenth century and
before. Here families come and children learn the traditional ways. Cultural
education takes place in the reservation schools and through programming
offered through the tribal Ah-Tah-Thi-Ki museum. The simple wood-
framed “Red Barn” on the Brighton Reservation, built to stable Seminole
horses in the early years of the cattle industry, was listed on the National
Register of Historic Places in 2008 and wil become another educational
point of pride for Seminole youth. Combined Seminole and Miccosukee
population numbers now approximate their pre–Second Seminole War
Florida’s Seminole and Miccosukee Peoples · 219
total. Despite unprecedented levels of wealth that would have been beyond
the comprehension of earlier generations, much uncertainty remains and
new generations must be prepared for the future. If history can serve as a
guide, the Seminoles will find a way to endure.
Bibliography
Blackard, David M.
Patchwork
and
Palmettos:
Seminole
Miccosukee
Folk
Art
since
1820
.
Fort Lauderdale: Fort Lauderdale Historical Society, 1990.
Cattelino, Jessica R.
High
Stakes:
Florida
Seminole
Gaming
and
Sovereignty
. Durham: Duke University Press, 2008.
Covington, James W.
The
Seminoles
of
Florida
. Gainesvil e: University Press of Florida,
1993.
Garbarino, Merwyn S.
Big
Cypress:
A
Changing
Seminole
Community
. New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1972.
Kersey, Harry A., Jr.
An
Assumption
of
Sovereignty:
Social
and
Political
Transformation
among
the
Florida
Seminoles,
1953–1979
. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1996.
MacCauley, Clay. “The Seminole Indians of Florida.” In
Fifth
Annual
Report
of
the
Bureau
of
Ethnology
, pp. 469–531. Washington, 1887.
Mahon, John K.
History
of
the
Second
Seminole
War
. Gainesvil e: University of Florida Press, 1967.
Sprague, John T.
The
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Progress,
and
Conclusion
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Florida
War
. 1848. Gainesville: proof
University of Florida Press, 1964.
Sturtevant, William C., editor.
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Source
Book
. New York: Garland, 1987.
Weisman, Brent R.
Unconquered
People:
Florida’s
Seminole
and
Miccosukee
Indians
.
Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1999.
West, Patsy.
The
Enduring
Seminoles:
From
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Wrestling
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Ecotourism
. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1998.
Wickman, Patricia R.
Osceola’s
Legacy
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Wright, J. Leitch, Jr.
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. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1987.
13
U.S. Territory and State
Daniel L. Schafer
On 17 July 1821, as the Stars and Stripes replaced the Spanish flag in the
public square outside Government House in Pensacola, America’s greatest
living military hero, General Andrew Jackson, supervised the ceremony.
Jackson, the man from Tennessee who in March 1814 led a coalition of
Americans and Indian allies in the decisive defeat of the Upper Creek at the
Battle of Horseshoe Bend that ended the Creek War, and nine months later
led the American army in a historic victory over a British army at the Battle
of New Orleans, had accepted President James Monroe’s offer to become
proof
the first American governor of Florida. Jackson had led American armies
on punishing invasions of the Spanish East and West Florida provinces in
1814 and 1818. The latter campaign, known as the First Seminole War, per-
suaded Spain to cede East and West Florida to the United States. Instead of
praise from Washington, however, Jackson’s political opponents impugned
his Florida victory as an outrageous usurpation of military power. Presiding
over the ceremonies in which Spain relinquished al claims to territories east
of the Mississippi River was for Jackson a triumphal moment.
There had been frustrating delays and vexations in the months of nego-
tiations that preceded the exchange of flags. The Adams-Onís Treaty was
signed by the principal negotiators on 22 February 1819 and approved by
the U.S. Senate within days, yet Spanish officials delayed approval until 24
October 1820. The U.S. Senate again ratified the treaty on 19 February 1821,
and President James Monroe and Secretary of State John Quincy Adams ap-
pointed Jackson governor of the new Territory of Florida on 12 March and
ordered him to proceed to Pensacola. Jackson appointed a subordinate, Lt.
Robert Butler, to manage the transition in St. Augustine. After further de-
lays, the exchange of flags final y took place on 10 July 1821 in St. Augustine
and 17 July in Pensacola.
· 220 ·
U.S. Territory and State · 221
Portrait of Richard
K. Call. Courtesy of
the State Archives
of Florida,
Florida
Memory
, http://
proof floridamemory.com/
items/show/128615.
Jackson’s tenure as governor was brief and tempestuous. He resigned
his office in September and departed Pensacola in early October. Before
leaving, however, the hot-tempered Jackson ordered Spanish governor José
Cal ava jailed briefly for obstructing delivery of documents pertinent to a
lawsuit. In an attempt to justify this serious diplomatic blunder, Jackson said
he had acted to protect the rights of a free quadroon woman who had been
cheated of her inheritance, an injustice that had been perpetuated for fifteen
years. His motive, Jackson explained later, had been to prevent “men of high
standing” from “trampl[ing] on the rights of the weak.”1
The incident soon passed from public consciousness, but the new gov-
ernor’s prickly temperament continued to raise alarm bel s in Washington.
Jackson was greatly troubled when President Monroe refused to accept his
nominees for the principal posts in the Florida administration. Jackson had
expected wide powers of patronage to reward his loyal associates. Instead,
Monroe appointed the higher-ranking secretaries, judges, and attorneys.
Jackson chose officeholders for Escambia and St. Johns Counties, two vast
222 · Daniel L. Schafer
administrative units that were reminiscent of the separate provinces of
Spanish East and West Florida. He also chose the judges for the county
courts and the mayors and aldermen of St. Augustine and Pensacola.
Richard Keith Cal , who would serve with distinction in Florida for the
next four decades, was the most important of Jackson’s appointees. He had
joined a volunteer unit under Jackson’s command in 1813, and participated
in the Battle of New Orleans and both Florida campaigns. Call handled the
early negotiations with Governor Cal ava and was named to the Pensacola
Town Council. He established a thriving law practice, served on the Florida
Legislative Council in 1822 and 1823 and as territorial delegate to Congress
in 1824. He also became a brigadier general in the Florida militia, and was
twice named governor of the territory. Cal became the leader of Ameri-
can Florida’s first governing elite, known popularly as the “Nucleus.” After
Jackson’s resignation, however, it was William P. Duval, a U.S. judge at Pen-
sacola, who succeeded him. Duval was a supporter of Jackson and general y
followed his policies.
In March 1822, Congress replaced the provisional structure with a single