Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
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and headlands toward the Spanish settlement at Río Pánuco, where they
landed on 10 September 1543.
Ful y four years and four months since setting out from the port of Ha-
vana, and after 3,700 miles of travel by land and water, 311 survivors clam-
bered ashore to the embrace of their countrymen. Behind them, they had
left the whitened bones of half their original number, including de Soto’s;
all their horses and pigs; their only plunder, poor-quality freshwater pearls
they had found at Camden, South Carolina, but had lost to fire at Mabila;
and all their dreams of Incan gold and Mexican magnificence. None of the
chartered goals established by the king had been met: behind them stood
no settlement or hospital, no mine or farm, no presidio or mission, no flag,
no cross. The most significant practical result of what may be cal ed that
extended armed raid was the damage inflicted on the southeastern native
populations. Dozens of chiefdoms, overstressed and humiliated by de Soto,
went into decline or col apsed. And in the wake of the
entrada
, thousands
of native people lay dead and dying, not from the sword but from the in-
troduction of Old World pathogens against which the aborigines had no
acquired immunities—smal pox, measles, and typhoid fever, among others.
34 · Michael Gannon
That “microbial invasion” had begun many years before with the first slavers
or with the crews of Juan Ponce, but de Soto’s men unwittingly reinforced it
on their long, doubly tragic death march through the interior of La Florida.
Then, six years later, there came a Dominican friar’s brief humanitarian
intervention that startles with its courage and magnanimity. In the spring
of 1549, Fray Luis Cáncer de Barbastro set sail in an unarmed vessel from
Veracruz, México, bound for the same La Florida in order to win the friend-
ship of its native people by peaceful means alone. Cast in much the same
mold as Montesinos and the other, current, great Dominican “defender of
the Indians,” Fray Bartolomé de las Casas, Cáncer had earlier participated
in the pacification and conversion of the seemingly intractable inhabitants
of Guatemala, causing that former “province of war” now to be called by his
Mexican countrymen the “province of true peace.” With Cáncer sailed three
other Dominican friars, a Spanish lay brother, a captured Florida native
woman interpreter named Magdalena, sailors, and a pilot, Juan de Arana,
who had been given strict orders to avoid any harbor where Spaniards had
earlier spread the terror of their arms. Whether through perversity or igno-
rance, Arana delivered his passengers to Tampa Bay.
Contact with the natives was almost immediate. Cáncer made several
friendly entreaties to them, and his touching references to the aborigines in
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a journal he kept on board ship display a genuine concern for their welfare.
But news soon arrived by the surprising agency of one Juan Muñoz, one of
de Soto’s soldiers who had been captured in that locale ten years before, that
one of the priests and the lay brother had been killed, that a ship’s sailor was
being held captive, and that Magdalena, having divested herself of Christian
clothing, had deserted to her people. On 26 June, Cáncer took a boat from
the ship to the beach where, with a crucifix in hand, he fel on his knees
in prayer. A group of natives approached. One of them took away his hat.
Another crushed his head with a club.
The province of Florida would remain for now a province of war. But at
one shining moment in 1549 it witnessed the spiritual gal antry of a guile-
less messenger of peace, whose name should be writ large in the pantheon
of Floridian and American heroes. Cultural y and political y what was most
significant about Cáncer’s sacrifice was that it demonstrated Spain’s com-
mitment in Florida to the New Laws of 1542, a commitment that would be
played out on a larger scale in the next Spanish undertaking.
After yet another decade passed without a permanent Iberian presence in
La Florida, which by that date was the name given to coastal territory that
ranged from the Florida Keys to Newfoundland, Spain was determined to
First European Contacts · 35
launch another settlement effort. The reasons were various. The Gulf shore
and the Atlantic coast of Spanish-claimed Florida were vulnerable to French
or English interlopers. Indeed France was advancing its own claim to the
Atlantic coast: French fishermen were already going ashore along the Caro-
lina coast to smoke their fish and mend their nets. And pirate ships, French
and English alike, were threatening the Gulf and Atlantic trade, particularly
the routes of the treasure ships, which departed Mexican ports twice each
year heavily laden with gold, silver, and gems and sailed via Havana up
the Canal de Bahama (Strait of Florida) as far as Bermuda, where they fol-
lowed the westerlies to Sevil a in Spain. For the protection of the plate fleets
it was decided that Spain needed effective occupation of two anchor sites,
Pensacola Bay, with its deep harbor, on the Gulf and what was then called
Punta de Santa Elena (Point of St. Helen, probably Tybee Island, Georgia),
on the Atlantic. The latter was to be the principal settlement, with town lots,
a plaza, church, and stronghouse.
Among the other concerns of Spain at the time were protection of ship-
wrecked sailors along the Gulf and Atlantic shores and missionary evangeli-
zation, now long delayed, of the aborigines. The bishop of Cuba weighed in
with still another concern: so few native Cuban women remained as eligible
wives for Spanish soldiers that a male on that island was lucky if he could
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find a wife eighty years old, and Florida, he argued, ought to be an excellent
source of young brides.
The new King Felipe II ordered a large Florida expedition to be mounted
out of México. To lead it, Luis de Velasco, viceroy of New Spain, chose an
army colonel, Don Tristán de Luna y Arel ano, veteran of the Francisco
Vázquez de Coronado expedition into the southwestern corner of the North
American continent that had been conducted contemporaneously with de
Soto’s entrada (the two expeditions being at one point only 300 miles apart
in the winter of 1541–42). Three Florida sites now were to be occupied: Pen-
sacola Bay, known as native Ochuse or Spanish Polanco; de Soto’s Coosa in
northwest Georgia; and Santa Elena, which was thought, erroneously, to
be only 120 miles east from Coosa overland. Eventual y, it was envisioned,
a string of Spanish settlements would link the three sites. Besides their pri-
mary mission of preempting French designs on the region, Velasco and
Luna hoped to convert the natives to Christianity—for which purpose five
Dominican priests and one lay brother joined the expedition—and to find
gold, silver, mercury, and precious gems, an aspiration never far from the
Spanish mind. To assist Luna in his travels, Velasco provided him with a
map of the de Soto march.
36 · Michael Gannon
On 11 June 1559, Luna departed San Juan de Ulúa on the Mexican Gulf
coast in thirteen ships of varying tonnage. His expedition numbered 200
foot soldiers, 200 cavalrymen with 240 horses in slings, 100 craftsmen and
tradesmen, a number of de Soto campaigners who knew the Florida inte-
rior, a native woman interpreter from Coosa whom the de Soto survivors
had brought to México with them, 100 Mexican warriors, and about 900
colonists, including married men, wives, and children. The last category of
passengers would prove to be more a burden than an advantage, since the
land toward which they headed had too little food and too much hardship
for untested civilians. The bishop of Cuba would later comment that, instead
of indolent and undisciplined men from New Spain, the expedition should
have recruited hardworking peasants from the mountains of León in Old
Spain.
After an unexpectedly long voyage, during which about 100 horses died,
and after several false sightings, the fleet entered Pensacola Bay (Ochuse)
on 14 August. Luna named the bay Bahía Filipina del Puerto Santa María,
after Felipe II and the Virgin Mary, and immediately set to work laying out
a settlement; exactly where it is not known, although two recent estimates
are Gulf Breeze or Tartar Point. We know that there were few natives in the
region, which meant few food crops, and that Luna dispatched two search
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parties, one by land and one by the Escambia River, to hunt for vil ages and
food to the north. The patrols returned empty-handed.
Disaster struck on 19 September in the form of a hurricane that, besides
killing an unknown number of colonists, sank or ran aground all but three
of the expedition’s ships. Half the supplies, including personal belongings,
were lost. Worse, most of the food was still on board one of the ships that
went down, and what food had already been unloaded was spoiled by the
storm’s downpour. The lot of nearly 1,500 people was now desperate.
In this extremity Luna had the wit to send two surviving frigates to Ha-
vana for food, and another overland patrol north for the same reason, be-
fore experiencing the first of a number of physical and mental breakdowns
that would afflict him throughout his Florida command. When he recov-
ered, he acted on a promising report from the northern patrol and, except
for fifty men, moved his starving coastal colony inland to the eighty-hut
native town of Nanipacana, about 100 miles up the Alabama River. There
the Spaniards found that the inhabitants had decamped with most of their
food stores. A 100-man patrol sent north from Nanipacana, to which Luna
appended the name Santa Cruz (Holy Cross), found no better prospects.
Meanwhile, the settlers were reduced to eating acorns, tree leaves, and wild
First European Contacts · 37
roots. Remembering the de Soto survivors’ tales of Coosa and its fertile
fields, Luna then dispatched 150 foot soldiers and 50 cavalrymen to find
that bountiful chiefdom. After three months, during which they subsisted
on blackberries, acorns, and the leather of their shoes, while their horses
became so famished they could hardly walk three miles a day, the travelers
came upon the principal town of Coosa.
It was not the Coosa described by de Soto’s men who were in the party.
Those men were astonished to find that the populous and wealthy society
they had encountered twenty years before had declined to a comparatively
few huts and fields. The demographic col apse was attributed to the dep-
redations of “a certain captain,” i.e., de Soto; even so, the natives who re-
mained willingly shared their food with the new invaders. During the three
months the Spanish detachment remained in the region, the Coosa asked
them to assist their forces in subjugating a nearby troublesome tribe, the
Napoochie. The Spaniards agreed to cooperate. Except for that single act of
warfare, the behavior of Luna’s men toward the aborigines of La Florida was
pacific and correct, in keeping with the spirit of the New Laws.
Meanwhile, three supply ships from México put in at Ochuse, and the
famished colonists at Nanipacana fled south to claim the provisions, leaving
behind a note to that effect for the Coosa command, which returned to Na-
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nipacana in October 1560. From Ochuse, a number of women, children, and
invalids returned to México on the supply ships. Besides food and clothing
those ships had brought urgent royal and viceregal orders for Luna to es-
tablish a presence at Santa Elena without further delay. Accordingly, in July
or August 1560, Luna directed sixty soldiers and three Dominicans to sail
around the peninsula to that Atlantic coastal site. On the voyage the ships
encountered foul weather, and the attempt was abandoned. At Ochuse the
remaining colonists soon exhausted their new rations and were reduced to
eating their leather, grass, and shellfish. Mutinous in mood, they engaged
in endless wrangling and insubordination, a situation that was aggravated
by Luna’s occasional mental seizures and deliriums. The inevitable rebellion
was averted by the skillful intervention of two Dominican friars and by the
arrival, in April 1561, of a new governor to relieve Luna, the alcalde mayor
of Veracruz, Ángel de Vil afañe. Luna sailed to Spain by way of Havana to
answer charges of dereliction. The commander of the fleet on which he took
passage was Pedro Menéndez de Avilés (see chapter 4).
Vil afañe bore orders identical to those last given to Luna: settle Santa
Elena at once. Leaving seventy or eighty men behind at Ochuse, he sailed
first to Havana to pick up horses and additional supplies. There, not
38 · Michael Gannon
surprisingly, about half his force deserted. With the remainder he followed
the Florida current north to what his pilots believed to be Santa Elena. The
four extant documents on the voyage are unclear, even contradictory, on
what happened at that site, wherever it was. They agree, however, in stating