The History of Florida (34 page)

Read The History of Florida Online

Authors: Michael Gannon

Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas

BOOK: The History of Florida
8.03Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

experienced by many of the refugees “pitiful indeed . . . having already been

forced to move two or three times from plantation to plantation, from coun-

try to town . . . herded together, prosperous and poor alike on the quays

of Savannah and Charleston, surrounded by cases and bundles containing

their few salvaged effects, and waiting to embark with their Negroes.” By the

end of December, more than 6,147 refugees had arrived in East Florida.

proof

The refugees were provided emergency rations, tools, and seeds for plant-

ing provisions crops at unoccupied rural tracts marked out by order of the

governor. New farms were created on vacant land along the rivers north and

south of St. Augustine and the banks of creeks and rivers feeding into the St.

Johns. The new planters focused on forest products for export to Britain’s

other Caribbean colonies, where demand was high for naval stores, lumber,

and provisions. Seemingly overnight, a new town of between two and three

hundred houses was created at St. Johns Bluff, six miles inland from the

Atlantic Ocean on the south bank of the St. Johns River. Governor Tonyn

was optimistic that the influx of refugees, which eventual y increased the

population to between 17,000 and 18,000, would result in “a happy Era [for]

this Province,” and that the new settlers would regard it a “safe asylum and

permanent residence.” Tonyn felt confident enough to authorize elections

for delegates to a Lower House of Assembly.

These hopes were dashed in January 1783 when British, Spanish, French,

and American negotiators meeting in Paris agreed to preliminary terms

of another Treaty of Paris. The colonies in rebellion were granted inde-

pendence, and East and West Florida were ceded to Spain. In June, John

British Rule in the Floridas · 159

Moultrie informed his friend James Grant he had decided to leave East Flor-

ida. After achieving a life of “real plenty, ease and elegance,” he expected “to

be turned adrift, and again seek a resting place. . . . England, I think, will

bring me up. My feelings, principles, everything prevents me having any

idea of remaining in America.”

Moultrie grieved for the other British residents of the colony. “What

shal become of these poor unfortunate but virtuous people I cannot di-

vine. . . . Thousands . . . have settled here and were just made comfortable,

and quite happy, astonished at the crops in the ground. . . . Had this province

not been ceded in the course of this year every part would have been full of

industrious people, the only thing wanted to make it great and flourishing.”

David Yeats had also decided to depart. In May 1784 he lamented: “The

idea of keeping possession of Estates in this Province under the Spanish

government is now I suppose vanished, we being told that such as choose

to remain must publicly profess the Catholic religion or absolutely quit their

Estates.” Yeats and the other British Loyalists were faced with a bitter choice:

stay in Florida under the terms of Spanish rule, or sacrifice wealth and prop-

erty and embark on a ship of the evacuation fleet.

On July 12, 1784, Spanish Governor Vizente Manuel de Zéspedes wit-

nessed the formal change of flags at the Plaza in St. Augustine. For the next

proof

year, two governors—one Spanish, the other British—resided in the town.

Eventual y Patrick Tonyn moved to the St. Marys River to supervise the final

departures, but it was not until November 10, 1785, that a troop transport

carried him and the last of the Loyalists away. British rule in the Floridas

had ended.

Bibliography

Manuscripts

British Library, London

Egmont Papers, Additional Manuscripts: 46920-47213, 17720, 27980–90.

Haldimand Collection, Additional MSS 21661-21892.

Colonial Williamsburg, Inc. Williamsburg, Va.

Carleton Papers.

National Archives of Scotland, Edinburgh

Amherst Papers, War Office 34.

James Grant of Ballindalloch Papers. Governorship Series. Microfilm copies are at Da-

vid Library of the American Revolution, Washington Crossing, Pennsylvania; Library

of Congress, Washington, D.C.; Jay I. Kislak Foundation, Miami Lakes, Florida.

160 · Robin F. A. Fabel and Daniel L. Schafer

National Archives of the United Kingdom, Kew, England

Colonial Office Papers 5 (vols. 540–73 for East Florida; vols. 574–635 for West Florida).

Treasury 77, Papers of the East Florida Claims Commission.

William L. Clements Library, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Gage Papers.

Published Books

Alden, John Richard.
John
Stuart
and
the
Southern
Colonial
Frontier:
A
Study
of
Indian
Relations,
War,
Trade,
and
Land
Problems
in
the
Southern
Wilderness,
1754–1775
. New York: Gordian Press, 1966.

Bailyn, Bernard.
Voyagers
to
the
West:
A
Passage
in
the
Peopling
of
America
on
the
Eve
of
the
Revolution
. New York: Knopf, 1986, chaps. 12 and 13.

Braund, Kathryn E. Hol and.
Deerskins
and
Duffels:
Creek
Indian
Trade
with
Anglo-America,
1685–1815
. Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press, 1993.

Cashin, Edward J.
The
King’s
Ranger:
Thomas
Brown
and
the
American
Revolution
on
the
Southern
Frontier
. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1989.

Covington, James W.
The
British
Meet
the
Seminoles:
Negotiations
between
British
Authorities
in
East
Florida
and
the
Indians:
1763–68
. Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1961.

Fabel, Robin F. A.
Bombast
and
Broadsides:
The
Lives
of
George
Johnstone
. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1987.

proof

———.
The
Economy
of
British
West
Florida,
1763–1783
. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1988.

Gold, Robert L.
Borderland
Empires
in
Transition:
The
Triple
Nation
Transfer
of
Florida
.

Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1969.

Griffin, Patricia C. “Blue Gold: Andrew Turnbul ’s New Smyrna Plantation.” In
Colonial

Plantations
and
Economy
in
Florida
, edited by Jane Landers. Gainesvil e: University Press of Florida, 2000, chap. 2.

———.
Mul et
on
the
Beach:
The
Minorcans
of
Florida,
1768–1788
. Jacksonville: University of North Florida Press, 1991.

Hancock, David.
Citizens
of
the
World:
London
Merchants
and
the
Integration
of
the
British
Atlantic
Community,
1735–1785.
New York and Cambridge: Cambridge University

Press, 1995.

Johnson, Cecil.
British
West
Florida,
1763–1783
. New York: Archon, 1971.

Lewis, James A.
The
Final
Campaign
of
the
American
Revolution:
Rise
and
Fal
of
the
Spanish
Bahamas
. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1991.

Mowat, Charles Loch.
East
Florida
as
a
British
Province,
1763–1784
. 1943. Facsimile reprint, Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1964.

Nelson, Paul David.
General
James
Grant:
Scottish
Soldier
and
Royal
Governor
of
East
Florida
. Gainesville: University Presses of Florida, 1993.

Panagopoulos, Epaminondas P.
New
Smyrna:
An
Eighteenth-Century
Greek
Colony
.

Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1966.

British Rule in the Floridas · 161

Rea, Robert R. “‘Graveyard for Britons,’ West Florida, 1763–1781.”
Florida
Historical
Quar-

terly
47 (1969).

———. “Pensacola under the British (1763–1781).” In
Colonial
Pensacola
, edited by James

R. McGovern. Hattiesburg: University of Southern Mississippi Press, 1972.

Schafer, Daniel L.
Governor
James
Grant’s
Vil a:
A
British
East
Florida
Indigo
Plantation
. St.

Augustine: St. Augustine Historical Society, 2000.

———. “‘Not So Gay a Town in America as This’: St. Augustine, 1763–1784.” In
The
Oldest

City:
St.
Augustine,
Saga
of
Survival
, edited by Jean Parker Waterbury. St. Augustine: St. Augustine Historical Society, 1983, chap. 4.

———. “Plantation Development in British East Florida: A Case Study of the Earl of

Egmont.”
Florida
Historical
Quarterly
43 (October 1984):172–83.

———.
St.
Augustine’s
British
Years,
1763–1784
. St. Augustine: St. Augustine Historical Society, 2001.

———. “‘A Swamp of an Investment’? Richard Oswald’s British East Florida Plantation

Experiment.” In
Colonial
Plantations
and
Economy
in
Florida
, edited by Jane Landers.

Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2000, chap. 1.

———.
Wil iam
Bartram
and
the
Ghost
Plantations
of
British
East
Florida
. Gainesvil e: University Press of Florida, 2010.

———. “‘Yellow Silk Ferret Tied Round Their Wrists’: African Americans in British East

Florida, 1763–1784.” In
The
African
American
Heritage
of
Florida
, edited by David R.

Colburn and Jane L. Landers, Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1995, chap. 4.

Searcy, Martha Condray.
The
Georgia-Florida
Contest
in
the
American
Revolution,
1776–

1778
. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1988.

Siebert, Wilbur Henry.
Loyalists
in
East
Florida
1774
to
1785
. 2 vols. Deland: Florida State proof

Historical Society, 1929.

Snapp, J. Russel .
John
Stuart
and
the
Struggle
for
Empire
on
the
Southern
Frontier
. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995.

Starr, J. Barton.
Tories,
Dons,
and
Rebels:
The
American
Revolution
in
British
West
Florida
.

Gainesville: University Presses of Florida, 1976.

TePaske, John Jay.
The
Governorship
of
Spanish
Florida,
1700–1763
. Durham: Duke University Press, 1964.

Troxler, Carole Watterson. “Loyalist Refugees and the British Evacuation of East Florida,

1783–1785.”
Florida
Historical
Quarterly
60, no. 1 (July 1981):1–28.

Weisman, Brent R.
Like
Beads
on
a
String:
A
Cultural
History
of
the
Seminole
Indians
in
North
Peninsular
Florida
. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1989.

———.
Unconquered
Peoples:
Florida’s
Seminole
and
Miccosukee
Indians
. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1999.

Wil iams, Linda K. “East Florida as a Loyalist Haven.”
Florida
Historical
Quarterly
54

(1976).

Wright, J. Leitch, Jr.
British
St.
Augustine
. St. Augustine: Historic St. Augustine Preserva-

tion Board, 1975.

———.
Florida
in
the
American
Revolution
. Gainesvil e: University Presses of Florida, 1975.

10

The Second Spanish Period

in the Two Floridas

Susan Richbourg Parker and William S. Coker

Spanish rule returned to East and West Florida in 1784. Spain regained its

former colonies at the peace negotiations for the Treaty of Versailles; Spain

had declared war on Great Britain in 1779 during the War of the American

Other books

Did Jesus Rise From the Dead? by William Lane Craig
Cupid's Christmas by Bette Lee Crosby
Hide in Plain Sight by Marta Perry
Galactic Pot-Healer by Philip K. Dick
Robin Hood by David B. Coe
Starfist: Firestorm by David Sherman; Dan Cragg