| Florida,
respectively. The Spanish never had a firm hold on Florida, and
maintained tenuous control over the region by converting the local
tribes, briefly with Jesuits and later with Franciscan friars. The
local leaders (caciques) demonstrated their loyalty to the Spanish
by converting to Roman Catholicism and welcoming the Franciscan
priests into their villages.The area of Spanish Florida diminished
with the establishment of English colonies to the north and French
colonies to the west. The English weakened Spanish power in the
area by supplying their Creek Indian allies with firearms and urging
them to raid the Timucuan and Apalachee client-tribes of the Spanish.
The English attacked St. Augustine, burning the city and its cathedral
to the ground several times, while the citizens hid behind the walls
of the Castillo de San Marcos. The Spanish, meanwhile, encouraged
slaves to flee the English-held Carolinas and come to Florida, where
they were converted to Roman Catholicism and given freedom. They
settled in a buffer community north of St. Augustine, called Gracie
Real de Santa Teresa de Mose, the first completely black settlement
in what would become the United States. Great Britain gained control
of Florida diplomatically in 1763 through the Peace of Paris (the
Castillo de San Marcos surrendered for the first time, having never
been taken militarily). Britain tried to develop Florida through
the importation of immigrants for labor, including some from Minorca
and Greece, but this project ultimately failed. Spain regained Florida
after Britain's defeat by the American colonies and the subsequent
Treaty of Versailles (1783). Finally, in 1819, by terms of the Adams-Onís
Treaty, Spain ceded Florida to the United States in exchange for
the American renunciation of any claims on Texas. On March 3, 1845,
Florida became the 27th state of the United States of America. On
January 10, 1861, before the formal outbreak of the Civil War, Florida
seceded from the Union; ten days later, the state became a founding
member of the Confederate States of America. The war ended in 1865.
On June 25, 1868, Florida's congressional representation was restored.
Until the mid-twentieth century, Florida was the least populous
Southern state; however, the local climate, tempered by the growing
availability of air conditioning, made the state a haven, and migration
from the Rust Belt and the Northeast sharply increased the population.
Economic prosperity combined with Florida's sudden elevation in
profile led to the Florida land boom of the 1920s, which brought
a brief period of intense land development before the Great Depression
brought it all to a halt. Florida's economy would not fully recover
until World War II. Today, Florida is the most populous state in
the South besides Texas, and the fourth most populous in the United
States. |