FLORIDA
A Concise History
continued
As
the pace of settlements steadily increased, there was
growing pressure on the
US
government to remove the Seminole Indians from the lands they had
settled on in
East Florida since they had been raiding white settlements in the state
of
Georgia
to the north. There were also Black Seminoles that were the descendants
of Africans,
who had been granted their freedom, together with runaway slaves who
had
escaped from the rice plantations of
South
Carolina
and
Georgia.
Together, they had fled into the Spanish Florida wilderness during the
early to
late 1600s. By the early 1800s, they had formed their own communities
in the
neighbourhood of the Seminole Indian settlements. Together, these two
groups
formed an alliance that was both multi-ethnic and involving both races.
This
alliance further inflamed the
Georgia
landowners with the result that clashes intensified between the white
settlers
and the Indians. As new settlers appeared, the position further
deteriorated.
In
1823, in accordance with the
Treaty of Moultrie Creek, the Seminoles gave up any claims to land within the
Florida
Territory
and, in return, they received a reservation in the middle of the
Florida
peninsula.
However, by 1928, the movement to move all the Indians in the
United States to west
of the
Mississippi River
grew in intensity.
In 1832, the
US
government
finally agreed to sign the Treaty of Payne's Landing with some of the
Seminole
chiefs. This treaty promised the Seminole Indians lands for settlement
to the
west of the Mississippi River on condition that they agreed to leave
Florida
of their own
accord. Although many of the Seminoles accepted the terms
of the treaty
and agreed to leave, there were a number of prominent Seminole chiefs
who had
no intention of leaving and did not accept the treaty. In fact, they
were quiteprepared to
defend their claims to
the land which they had received in the 1823 treaty. As the position
gradually
deteriorated, pressure mounted on the government by the white settlers
to
remove all of the Indians from the area, and to use force, if
necessary.
Finally, in 1835, the US Army arrived and was directed to enforce the
treaty.
The "Dade
Massacre" was an 1835
defeat for the United States Army which turned out to be the catalyst
that
started the Second Seminole War that lasted until 1842.
On December 23,
1835, two
U.S.
contingents
consisting of 110 men under the command of Major Francis L. Dade, left
Fort
Brooke
(now called
Tampa),
on a mission to supply and
reinforce
Fort
King
(now called
Ocala).
They were ambushed by a surprise attack from a 180 Seminole Indian
force, which
left only one surviving trooper.
For seven years
after the start of the Second Seminole War, a force numbering some 900
to 1500
Seminole Indian warriors were very effective employing guerrilla hit
and run
probing actions against the US Army troops. Osceola was
an influential
leader of the Seminoles in
Florida,
and maintained much influence on Micanopy, the highest-ranking Seminole
chief. In 1837, Osceola was
arrested upon arrival
in
Fort
Payton
for what he understood were
negotiations to find a truce, and was duly imprisoned.The deceitful way in which Osceola's was
captured created a
national outcry. He died of malaria three months later whilst in
prison. He
came to epitomise the war and the struggle of the Seminoles.
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